Century Man Runs 9/11 Memorial 5K In New York City

April 22, 2013

Runners from across the world — including one local man — honored the Boston Marathon victims while remembering the tragedy of 9/11 during a 5K run Sunday in New York City.

Jerry Sanders of Century joined about 3,000 runners and walkers in the 9/11 Memorial 5K run and walk, a untimed fundraiser for the yet to be opened 9/11 Memorial Museum. The event started at Pier 57 and continued 3.1 miles to the World Trade Center.

But the finish line was not the end of the race for Sanders.

“I could not stop,” Sanders said in an email Sunday evening. “Completed the 5K then walked around the city for over 4 hours waving my flag and meeting people. I (my flag) sure was popular! I could  not count the people that wanted their pic taken with me.”

Along the way, someone noticed Sander’s “Marines” hat, confirmed that he was a Marine, and led the crowd in the Marine Corp Hymn.

“They sang while I choked back tears, as I was fighting tears from the start,” he said. “Such great people New Yorkers.”

At the finish, a lady approached Sanders and asked why he was carrying the flag, and he explained it was memory of the 9/11 victims and  their families. She said her husband had been killed in the North Tower collapse. She asked Sanders if he would meet her husband, and he accompanied her to the site of the north tower where she pointed out her husband’s name on the memorial, rubbing her hand across his name.

“That did it for me,” Sanders said. “I could not talk, only hug her.”

“Words just won’t do,” he said, calling the day an experience of a lifetime.

Pictured: Jerry Sanders of Century carried his American flag as he completed the 9/11 Memorial 5K run and walk Sunday in New York Century. Submitted photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Carra Taylor

April 22, 2013

Carra Taylor passed away peacefully Saturday, April 13, 2013, at home. She courageously fought cancer until her last remaining weeks with her loving family at her side, never losing her spirit or faith. Carra recently moved to St. George, UT, to be with her daughter and son-in-law.

Carra was born on October 15, 1929, in Century; beloved daughter of Cleveland and Bessie Pert. Carra married Roscoe McHenry (deceased) and they had three loving children. On December 15, 1972, she married her soul mate Charles Taylor (deceased).

Those left to treasure her many memories are her beloved daughter, Linda Schmal and son-in-law, George Schmal; son, Stephen Paul McHenry and wife Diane; sister Grace Mitchell and brother William Pert.

Carra was most proud of her grandchildren and great grandchildren all living in Florida. She loved spending time with Marcus Berthiaume; Stephanie Gibbs, her husband Mathew and daughters Kyleigh and Hayden; Tanya McHenry and children Trace and Addison; Stephen Paul McHenry II.

Carra was kind, generous, and loving. Carra had a big heart and will be greatly missed, but the world is a better place from having her here for 83 years.

The family appreciates your continued prayers and support, and request memorials in the honor of Carra Taylor to Intermountain Homecare, 2250 South 1300 West, Salt Lake City, Utah 84119.

A celebration of the life of Carra Taylor will be Tuesday April 23rd at Trahan Family Funeral Home. Visitation is from 10 a.m. until noon followed by services at the chapel. Graveside services will be held at Pensacola Memorial Gardens at 1 p.m.

Trahan Family Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Micha R’Shea Scott

April 22, 2013

Micha R’Shea Scott, age 37, of Jay, passed away April 19, 2013, after an asthma attack. She was born August 7, 1975, in Brewton.

She was preceded in death by Mr. R D Scott , great-grandfather; Mr. R M Scott, grandfather; Mrs. Etha Mattie Scott , great grandmother; Mrs. Dorothy Lowell, grandmother; Mrs. Margaret Carden, grandmother; Mr. E J Adams, grandfather and Mr. Wayne Huey, grandfather.

She is survived by her son Mical Wayne Scott who was the love of her life. She is also survived by her parents, Michael and Patsy Scott; her sisters Kara Ritchie (Alan) and Ashley Buckley(Shane); nieces Allison Ritchie, nephews Truitt Ritchie, Aiden and Easton Buckley; as well as many other loving family and friends.

Funeral services will be held at 2 pm, April 23, 2013, at Jay Church of Christ with Bro. Stanley Ryan officiating and David Howze leading music. Burial will follow at Jay City Cemetery.

A visitation will be held Monday, April 22, 2013, from 6-8  p.m. at Jay Funeral Home. Pallbearers are Shane Buckley, Alan Ritchie, Adam Scott, Travis Smith, William Burgess and Ralph Hayes.

We would like to thank all of our family and friends who have provided so much love, prayers, food and support during this difficult time.

Increasing Clouds, Rain By Wednesday

April 21, 2013

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

  • Tonight: Increasing clouds, with a low around 52. Northeast wind around 5 mph.
  • Monday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 74. East wind 5 to 10 mph.
  • Monday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 54. East wind 5 to 10 mph.
  • Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 78. East wind 5 to 15 mph.
  • Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 57. South wind 5 to 10 mph becoming light southeast after midnight.
  • Wednesday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 81. East wind 5 to 10 mph becoming south in the afternoon.
  • Wednesday Night: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 58. South wind 5 to 10 mph becoming west after midnight.
  • Thursday: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 78. North wind around 5 mph.
  • Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 56. North wind around 5 mph.
  • Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 82.
  • Friday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 60.
  • Saturday: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 80.
  • Saturday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63.
  • Sunday: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 77.

Bratt Elementary To Purchase 75 iMacs, iPads With Poarch Grant

April 21, 2013

Tuesday, the Escambia County School District is set to approve the purchase of iMac computers and iPads for Bratt Elementary School as part of a cultural heritage project funded by the Poarch Band of Creek Indians.

The school will purchase 25 iMac computers with three year warranties and 50 fourth generation 16GB iPads with Wi-Fi.  The $54,243.25 purchase will be covered from part of a $82,213.90 grant from the Poarch Creeks in March.

The remainder of the grant will be used to allow students to research their cultural background and present the results during a parent’s night in May.

The Poarch Creek grant to Bratt Elementary was part of more than $2 million presented to area schools.

Pictured: The Poarch Band of Creek Indians present an $82,212.90 grant to Bratt Elementary earlier this year. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Florida Files Suit Against BP On Three Year Anniversary Of Oil Spill

April 21, 2013

Florida filed its own lawsuit Saturday against BP and Halliburton Company seeking to recoup revenue the state claims it lost after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon rig explosion and oil spill. The lawsuit was filed in the Panama City Division of the Northern District of Florida.

The lawsuit includes numerous federal, state and maritime counts. Under the Oil Pollution Act, the State of Florida is entitled to the revenues it lost due to the oil spill, including sales and use taxes; corporate taxes; documentary stamp taxes; cigarette surcharges; cigarette excise taxes; beer, wine, and liquor taxes; fuel taxes; rental car surcharges; and utility taxes and receipts. The State is also seeking punitive damages under maritime and Florida common law due to the egregious nature of the misconduct that led to this environmental and economic disaster.

Two years ago the state rejected a chance to join the on-going federal lawsuit in Louisiana over the Gulf of Mexico spill, with Gov. Rick Scott saying at the time he wanted to ensure Florida was “treated fairly” in terms of receiving reimbursement from BP. The filing came just before the three-year statute of limitation, under the Oil Protection Act, to recover economic losses from the spill.

“The State of Florida suffered considerable economic losses as a result of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, and BP and Halliburton must be held accountable,” Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a release.

Representatives from BP and Halliburton didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Bondi’s lawsuit comes as the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services announced Friday new test results showing Florida seafood products from the Gulf are safe.

“These tests show that Florida seafood is without a doubt safe to eat. Our shrimp, fish and other products continue to be some of the best quality seafood in the world,” Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam said in a release.

The department has used $20 million from BP for testing the more than 3,000 different seafood products from the Gulf and to promote the seafood industry.

University of Alabama Wins National Poetry Championship; Cantonment Resident Places

April 21, 2013

The University of Alabama has brought home another national championship trophy, while a Cantonment native also placed nationally.

Tuscaloosa native Thaddeus Fitzpatrick won first place in Poetry Interpretation at the American Forensic Association-National Individual Events Tournament this month and also finished ninth in the individual sweepstakes out of 198 total students. It marked back-to-back championships for Fitzpatrick, who was national champion in prose interpretation in 2012.

Fitzpatrick’s performance led the Alabama Forensic Council, UA’s speech and debate team, to a fifth place national finish. Junior Collin Metcalf, a gradate of Tate High School, is a member of the team, which placed in the top five for the first time since 2006.

Metcalf placed fourth in Extemporaneous Speaking and ninth place in  Impromptu Speaking.

Full results are listed below:

5th Place Team Sweepstakes

Thaddeus Fitzpatrick, senior, Tuscaloosa

National champion, Poetry Interpretation
9th Place Individual Sweepstakes
4th place, Prose Interpretation (finalist)
8th place, Dramatic Interpretation
(semi-finalist)
17th place, Duo Interpretation with Taylor McDonald

Kalyn Lee, freshman, Hoover

19th place, Persuasive Speaking (quarter-finalist)

Collin Metcalf, junior, Cantonment
4th place Extemporaneous Speaking (finalist)
9th place, Impromptu Speaking 
(semi-finalist)

Davis Vaughn, junior, Montgomery

19th place, Extemporaneous Speaking 
(quarter-finalist)
15th place, Persuasive Speaking (quarter-finalist)

Kevin Pabst, junior, Niceville,

19th place, Communication Analysis (quarter-finalist)

Taylor McDonald, senior, Prattville

4th place, Dramatic Interpretation (finalist)
7th place, Prose Interpretation
(semi-finalist)
17th place, Duo Interpretation with Thaddeus Fitzpatrick (quarter-finalist)

A Final Farewell: Last Call Sounds For Veteran Firefighter Mike Staples

April 21, 2013

Funeral services were held Saturday for Mike Staples, a retired assistant chief of the Atmore Fire Department. He was 51.

Staples passed away suddenly last Tuesday.

Fire departments from across the area took part in a fireman’s funeral for Staples. During graveside services, Atmore dispatchers issued one final call for “F-2″, Staple’s assistant chief radio number, over the city’s fire radio system.

“Station 2 to F-2,” the dispatcher said after emergency alert tones.

There was no response. Just static and silence.

“Station 2 to F-2, this is your last call,” the dispatcher said again, his voice resounding across the handheld fire radios at the service.

More static and and silence, broken by the dispatcher with a “last call” for Staples.

“There is no response from F-2. On behalf of the community and the Atmore Fire Department, it is with deep sadness and sorrow to report that after 31 years  of heroism, bravery and service, Mike Staples has completed his last and final call. He has returned home with the Lord to fulfill his new duty as  an angel to watch over his family, friends and fellow firemen. He will forever be in our hearts.”

Staples devoted over 30 years of life to fire service, joining the Atmore Fire Department as a volunteer at the age of 17. He was hired as a paid fireman in 1981, and retired as assistant chief on September 28, 2012.

Northview’s Elliott, Kyles Place In State Weightlifting Meet

April 21, 2013

Northview’s Arkelle Elliott and LaMikal Kyles placed in the 1A State Weightlifting Meet in Kissimmee on Saturday.

Kyles finished eighth in the state in the 183-pound class with a total of 560 pounds, an improvement over his 535 pound total at regionals. Kyles, weighing in at 172.5 pounds, had a bench press of 310 pounds and a clean jerk of 250 pounds — all personals bests.

In the 199-pound class, Elliot finished 11th in the state with a total of 575 pounds.  Weighing in at 198.9 pounds, Elliot had a best bench press of 330 pounds and a clean jerk of 245 pounds — all matching his personal best records.

Also in the 199-pound class, Justin Beauford of West Florida High School placed seventh with  a total weight of 600 pounds.

Pictured: LaMikal Kyles and Arkelle Elliot at the 1A State Weightlifting Meet in Kissimmee on Saturday. Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.


Budget Negotiations Move Forward After Saturday Talks

April 21, 2013

Lawmakers continued to work toward a budget agreement Saturday, as one budget conference committee finished its work and another cleared away a major hurdle to a deal.

But some of the highest-profile issues, from a difference over teacher pay raises to how to structure a major change in Medicaid reimbursements, remained unresolved with a Tuesday deadline looming before legislative leaders take over the negotiations.

A joint House-Senate committee overseeing the government operations side of the budget — largely dealing with state regulators and management — reached a deal on most of the issues facing the committee Saturday, becoming the first of several conference committees to finish its work.

“We both wanted to spend our time wisely and be here and be efficient and so it was a lot more smooth than I think it could have been, or I, in my mind, could see that it could have been,” said Rep. Clay Ingram, R-Pensacola, who led the House negotiations.

Sen. Alan Hays, R-Umatilla, headed the Senate contingent.

But the panel still had to “bump” some issues up to meetings next week between Senate Appropriations Chairman Joe Negron, R-Stuart, and House Appropriations Chairman Seth McKeel, R-Lakeland. All unresolved issues have to be referred to the pair by 5 p.m. Tuesday.

Among the differences that couldn’t be overcome: Where some state technology functions should be housed, a pair of measures meant to increase transparency in state spending and a Senate provision requiring the Public Service Commission to perform a review of the “prudency, cost effectiveness, and need of any proposed nuclear power plant for which cost recovery has been authorized.”

Meanwhile, lawmakers working on the budget for the state’s justice system agreed to remove clerks of court from the budget, where they had been housed since 2009. Senate lawmakers had wanted to retain some control over clerks’ spending to ensure accountability.

Sen. Rob Bradley, R-Fleming Island, said the upper chamber had made that concession on the budget with an eye on later discussions about a related bill.

“But when we start to get into the details of conforming bill language I think you’ll see it become apparent that there will continue to be robust accountability measures with regards to clerks’ operations throughout the state,” he said.

Despite the movements Saturday, some of the biggest conflicts remained unresolved. The chambers didn’t expect to hold discussions on the plans to overhaul the way Medicaid pays hospitals until at least Sunday, preferring to get other, smaller details of the health care budget out of the way first.

And the conference committee hammering out a deal on education spending met just once for the second day in a row. House lawmakers want a difference structure for teacher pay raises and $148.4 million more that local districts could, but would not be required to, use on those increases.

By The News Service of Florida

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