Tate Beats Escambia

November 8, 2014

In a battle of local powerhouses, the Tate High School Aggies beat the Escambia Gators 27-24 Friday night in Cantonment.

The Aggies took a sizable 20-0 lead, beginning with 70-yard touchdown run with 7:53 on the clock in the first quarter.

The Aggies hit the road next Friday night for the first round of the state playoffs against Lincoln High School in Tallahassee.

For a photo gallery, click here.

NorthEscambia.com photos by Keith Garrison, click to enlarge.

Chiefs Drop Non-District Game To Blountstown (With Photo Gallery)

November 8, 2014

The Northview Chiefs finished out their regular season with a non-district  28-27 loss to the Blountstown Tigers Friday night at Tommy Weaver Memorial Stadium in Bratt.

The loss was, simply, due to too many mistakes, said Northview head coach Sid Wheatley

“We just had too many mistakes down the stretch. Two different times, we had a two possession lead. That’s when you’ve got to go finish things off, and we didn’t do it,” said  Wheatley.  “And that absolutely killed it.”

The Chiefs took an early 7-0 lead with 9:31 to go in the first quarter on an eight-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Gavin Grant to Cameron Newsome in the end zone.  Blountstown tied it up early in the second with the Chiefs making it 13-7 with 8:19 to go in the second with a 25-yard Nick Lambert touchdown.

Lambert scored again for the Chiefs with 7:57 to go in the third. And the final score of the cold night in Bratt come from Grant with a 60-yard quarterback keeper.

The Chiefs are looking to move on quickly, putting the loss behind them and looking forward to next week and round one of the 1A state playoffs.

“We’ve got to get better and our minds have to get better, because our second season begins now,” Wheatley said. “This game tonight has no bearing on what’s going to take place in the future.”

Next up in the future of the Chiefs are the Vernon Yellowjackets next Friday night on the road.

Wheatley said the team was looking toward a really good week of practice, “we are going to prepare them hard”,  and we are going to on the road and get things done at Vernon.”

For a photo gallery, click here.

Senior Night, band and cheerleaders photos will be published in upcoming stories.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

BBB Warns Of Asphalt Paving Scam

November 8, 2014

The Better Business Bureau serving Northwest Florida is warning local consumers to watch out for unethical asphalt paving contractors. Numerous consumers have alerted BBB of an individual soliciting paving work door-to-door, the organization said.

According to the BBB, a local couple hired the individual and paid $3,000 before any work was done. Unfortunately, the check was cashed and the worker never returned. The consumers are now working with local police to track down the individual. Watch for these common signs of an asphalt scam:

  • They claim to have leftover asphalt from another job. Be aware of paving companies that approach your home, stating that they are “in the area” and have extra asphalt or concrete to repair your driveway for a minimal cost. Professional asphalt contractors know, with great accuracy, how much paving material is needed to complete a project. Rarely will they have leftover material.
  • High pressure sales. Never hire someone on the spot. Trustworthy contractors provide a written estimate that will be valid for days or weeks. Ask for local references and verify that the contractor is in compliance, current and up-to-date with all local licensing, bonding and insuring requirements.
  • Deals that seem too good to be true. If the quoted price seems very low, chances are the quality of work will also be quite low. Many times the company will quote a low price for their work and upon completion overcharge the customer.
  • No contract is offered. Insist on a written estimate specifying in detail the work to be performed and the agreed total price, not just price per square foot. Then get at least two more quotes before hiring a contractor.
  • Unmarked trucks. Often the trucks they travel in are unmarked or they have an out-of-town license plate, address and phone number. A little research will reveal that they have no permanent address and the phone number is often an answering machine or answering service.

High School Football Scoreboard

November 8, 2014

Here are scores from the final week of the regular season in Florida and the first round of the playoffs in Alabama

FLORIDA

  • Blountstown
  • Tate 27, Escambia 24
  • West Florida 28, Washington 6
  • OPEN: Pace, Milton, Pine Forest, Jay

ALABAMA – PLAYOFF GAMES

  • T.R. Miller 35, Greensboro 6
  • W.S. Neal 51, Northside (Tuscaloosa) 34
  • Flomaton 35, Pickens County 20
  • Escambia Academy 54, Glenwood 0

Blue Angels Homecoming Show This Weekend (With Complete Schedule)

November 8, 2014

The Blue Angels will close the 2014 season at their annual Homecoming Air Show aboard Naval Air Station Pensacola today and Sunday.

In celebration of the 100th anniversary of the air station, this year’s show days will include two full show days Saturday and Sunday at 9 a.m. (gates open at 8 a.m.)

Prior to the world-famous Blue Angels F/A 18 Hornet performances, the Blues’  C-130 Hercules transport known as “Fat Albert” will thrill the crowd with its short field take-off and low level passes at 2 p.m. followed by the Blues.

Tentatively scheduled for all both days will be extraordinary aerobatics by performers such as John Klatt in his “Screamin’ Sasquatch’ Jet Waco and David Martin will pilot his Brietling CAP 232.  Roger Buis will amaze the crowd in “Otto the Helicopter” and Matt Younkin will excite everyone with aerobatics in his Beech 18. Neal Darnell will also be on hand to impress visitors in his Shockwave  Jet Truck.

The crowd can marvel at the grace and beauty of the renowned Budweiser Clydesdales on Saturday. The Clydesdales were first introduced to the public in April 1933 and since have awed audiences all over the world.

Visitor may also stroll around more than 50 static display aircraft, from early aviation vintage planes to state-of-the-art modern fighters and more. There will also be a “Kids Zone” for children.

Admission and parking for all shows are free.  Areas will be reserved for the   physically challenged.  Food and memorabilia will be available at numerous concession stands. Pets and coolers are not permitted.  Security personnel and signs will direct spectators to parking areas near the show site.

2014 Air Show Schedule

Saturday and Sunday
Gates Open: 8 a.m. / Air Show begins 9 a.m.

  • NASP Parade of Trainers
  • Otto the Helicopter
  • Stearman Team
  • Gene Soucy
  • Kevin Coleman
  • John Klatt – Air National Guard
  • Air National Guard with Shockwave Jet Truck
  • Mike Rambo – Beechcraft
  • Opening Ceremony
  • United States Air Force Academy Wings of Blue Skydiving Team with the National Anthem
  • Matt Younkin
  • Bob Carlton – Vertigo Airshows
  • Air National Guard with Shockwave Jet Truck
  • Budweiser Clydesdales (Saturday only)
  • Gene Soucy with Teresa Stokes wing walker
  • Team AeroDynamix
  • Mike Goulian – Goodyear
  • Screamin Sasquatch
  • David Martin – Breitling
  • Fat Albert Demonstration- 2 pm
  • USN Blue Angels

Local Tradition: Walnut Hill Vol. Fire Dept. Holding 45th Fish Fry

November 7, 2014

fd10.jpg

Saturday will mark the 45th anniversary of what has become one of the biggest events in  Walnut Hill and surrounding communities — the annual fish fry at the Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department.

The fish fry has been held annually since 1969, according to Assistant Chief Kevin Mininger. The first fish fry on record was held about a month after the department was chartered.

The fire department’s first fish fry was held on Saturday, April 10, 1965,  just after the Walnut Hill Fire Department was officially chartered on Monday, March 8, 1965, during a meeting held at the Ernest Ward High School.

Adult plates were sold for $1, and plates for children under 12 were 50 cents. According to minutes from the fire department’s charter meeting, the fish fry was suggested by O.D. Gibson. It was organized as a fund raiser, and “to let the community know what had been accomplished” with the new department. It was a two hour community event.

That first fish fry cost the department $87.62, including $43 for fish and $13.23 to Lawrence Cooper’s Grocery. The total income was $256.50, netting a $168.88 profit for the Walnut Hill Fire Department’s first fund raiser.

The fire department was organized by the Walnut Hill Ruritan Club, under the leadership of Ruritan President Royce Ward.

minutes.jpgIn 1968, the Walnut Hill Fire Department held an open house at their first building on November 16, 1968. The first firehouse was located under the water tower at Highway 97 and Arthur Brown Road. Before the building was completed, fire trucks and other equipment was stored in members’ sheds and barns.

According to Mininger, there are no records indicating that a fish fry was held each year between 1965 and 1968, but the fish fry events have been held annually since 1969.

The department’s first truck was about a 1957 model GMC 2 1/2 ton 4×2 fuel service truck loaned from the Florida Forest Service.

Mininger has also compiled a list of the department’s fire chiefs as follows: E. C. (Chuck) Church, 1965 to September 1966; Bob Holdeman, September 1966 to August 1968; Vern Peters from August 1968 to 1983; Jack Brown from 1983 to December 1984; Ervin Schneider, 1985 to 1987; Dennis Rigby, 1988 to 1989; Bill Jackson, 1990 to February 1991; Al Bradley, March 1991 to 1992; Robert Stewart, 1993 to September 2008; and Chris Brown October 2008 to present.

The department’s first board of directors were: C.L. Byrd, Robert E. Holdeman, Kenneth Brown, W.H. Corley, Chief E. C. Church, Assistant Chief Buddy Sharpless, Assistant Chief Therman Raines, Captain Don Strickland, Captain James Pierce, Lt. roger Johnson, Lt. Glenn Thrower, J.H. Morgan, Sam Jantz and Harvey Bradberry.

To read the original minutes from the charter meeting of the Walnut Hill Fire Department, click here (pdf).

To read original fire department minutes from December 2, 1968, click here (pdf).

The Walnut Hill Volunteer Fire Department’s 45th Annual Fish Fry will be held Saturday from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. at the Walnut Hill Fire Station on Highway 97. Plates will be $7 each with your choice of catfish fillets or grilled chicken, plus baked beans, cole slaw, hush puppies, homemade bread and cake. There will also be drawing for door prizes beginning at 1 p.m. and a live auction.

Pictured top: This undated photograph from the early days of the Walnut Hill Fire Department shows Robert Mininger, an assistant chief; Bob Holdeman, the department’s second chief; Royce Ward, president of the Ruritan Club; and Vern Peters who served 15 years as the department’s third chief. Pictured inset: The original handwritten minutes from the department’s first meeting. Pictured below: Former Chief Robert Stewart (left) was  honored in 2008. Stewart is being presented a framed uniform shirt by current Chief Chris Brown. NorthEscambia.com file photo, click to enlarge.

whvfdfish21.jpg

Cooler Weather Forecast

November 7, 2014

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

  • Friday Sunny, with a high near 64. North wind 5 to 10 mph.
  • Friday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 37. North wind around 5 mph.
  • Saturday Mostly sunny, with a high near 65. Northeast wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the morning.
  • Saturday Night Mostly cloudy, with a low around 41. North wind around 5 mph.
  • Sunday Sunny, with a high near 68. North wind around 5 mph.
  • Sunday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 41. Northwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.
  • Monday Sunny, with a high near 72. Calm wind becoming south around 5 mph in the afternoon.
  • Monday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 50. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm after midnight.
  • Veterans Day Mostly sunny, with a high near 74.
  • Tuesday Night A 30 percent chance of showers. Partly cloudy, with a low around 51.
  • Wednesday A 20 percent chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a high near 63.
  • Wednesday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 40.
  • Thursday Mostly sunny, with a high near 59.

Ernest Ward Middle Honors Veterans (With Photo Gallery)

November 7, 2014

Ernest Ward Middle School paused to honor veterans from the across the area Thursday afternoon.

“It’s a great day to be here, in the United States of America,” guest speaker retired Navy Capt. Frank Smith told the student body and their veteran guests. “Because we truly do live in the land of the free.”

During an emotional display. the students prepared a small, white table with a place setting for one  in front of an empty black chair. The ceremony represented the never-ending hope for the return of MIA soldiers.  The program also included patriotic music, an armed forces salute and the presentation of colors from the Northview High School NJROTC.

For more photos, click here.

The annual Veterans Day program at Ernest Ward is a longstanding community tradition, held annually for over 20 years.

Pictured top: Retired Navy Capt. Frank Smith recalls taking his Oath of Enlistment into the U.S. Navy. Pictured inset: The Ernest Ward Middle School Advanced Chorus performs. Pictured below: The “MIA Table”. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Florida Supreme Court Ponders Life Sentences For Juveniles

November 7, 2014

The Florida Supreme Court on Thursday heard arguments in a debate about sentencing for juveniles convicted of first-degree murder.

Pointing to a 2012 U.S. Supreme Court ruling, two inmates who are serving life in prison for murders they committed as juveniles are challenging their sentences.

The ruling, in a case known as Miller v. Alabama, banned mandatory life sentences for juveniles convicted of murder. Juveniles can still face life sentences in such cases, but judges must weigh criteria such as the offenders’ maturity and the nature of the crimes before imposing that sentence.

On Thursday, attorneys for Rebecca Lee Falcon and Anthony Duwayne Horsley argued that the ruling — and a new state law that carries it out — should apply retroactively to their clients, giving them the possibility of release.

The session was lively, with most of the Florida justices’ questions directed at what the Legislature intended by passing the new law. An underpinning of the Miller ruling was that juveniles are different from adults and function at different stages of brain development, so that a life sentence without the possibility of parole violates the Eighth Amendment ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

“The question becomes, ‘What should the remedy be?’” said Karen Gottlieb, Falcon’s attorney. “The ultimate issue is how this court can best vindicate Eighth Amendment rights that are required under the Miller decision while at the same time doing as little violence as possible to the legislative intent.”

Lawmakers this spring approved new juvenile sentencing guidelines that went into effect July 1 in response to Miller and to a 2010 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in a case known as Graham v. Florida.

The Miller and Graham rulings have spawned legal questions in Florida courts since the Graham ruling was handed down. It took lawmakers that long to agree on the sentencing guidelines, but this year — reluctant to leave it to courts to decide on a case-by-case basis — did so unanimously.

“That’s almost unheard of,” Justice Barbara Pariente said. “It’s the entire Legislature saying, after lots of hearings, ‘We think this is both good from a policy point of view as well as faithful to Miller.’ ”

Under the new law, a juvenile convicted of a murder classified as a capital felony could be sentenced to life in prison after a hearing to determine whether such a sentence is appropriate. If a judge finds that a life sentence is not appropriate, the juvenile would be sentenced to at least 35 years. Also, juveniles convicted in such cases would be entitled to reviews after 25 years.

Falcon is serving a life sentence for a 1997 murder in Bay County, when she was 15. That murder was committed in the course of a botched robbery. Horsley, whose case was heard Thursday with Falcon’s case, was convicted of first-degree murder in the 2006 shooting death of a convenience-store owner in Brevard County. He was 17 at the time of the murder.

Horsley was initially sentenced to life in prison without parole, but he argued on appeal that the Miller ruling made that sentence unconstitutional. Florida’s 5th District Court of Appeal later changed the sentence to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 25 years. That prompted the case to go to the state Supreme Court.

On Thursday, Assistant Attorney General Kellie Nielan argued that a life sentence does not violate the Constitution if it includes the option of parole.

But Justice Ricky Polston said that would create new questions, due to Florida abolishing parole decades ago on new crimes. A commission still hears cases from before the time parole was abolished.

“If there’s no parole, are you asking this court to order the parole commission to hear these cases even though we don’t have the power of the purse?” Polston asked. “We can’t give them the money or authorization to do this. Are you asking us to — from the bench — require a branch of government to enact the parole commission that’s been abolished?”

“I’m asking this court to follow precedent,” Nielan said. “I understand that we have to fashion a remedy for this.”

But while the new law was designed to bring Florida into compliance with the U.S. Supreme Court rulings, it doesn’t mention retroactivity.

And in July, when the Florida Supreme Court asked attorneys representing juvenile offenders to weigh in on the new law, Senate Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations Chairman Rob Bradley, the Senate sponsor, said it was not intended to address retroactivity.

“We were simply looking at a statutory scheme that was clearly unconstitutional,” the Fleming Island Republican told The News Service of Florida. “We were looking at two United States Supreme Court decisions that set forth certain parameters, and we developed a sentencing framework that complied with those two decisions. As far as how that applied individually to individual defendants, we’ll leave that to the court system.”

by Margie Menzel, The News Service of Florida

Byrneville Elementary Releases First Nine Weeks Honor Roll

November 7, 2014

The following students were named to the first nine weeks honor roll at Byrneville Elementary School:

Mrs. Barberree’s Kindergarten:

All Satisfactory

Nathan Carter
Autumn Coleman
Clay Everly
Gabrielle Hawsey
Akeylah Jefferson
Caleb Levins
D’Angelo Phifer
Jase Portwood
Hunter Powell
Will Sloan
Isaiah Therrell
Zachary Weaver
Cannon Whorff
Allison Yoder

Mrs. Coleman’s Kindergarten

All Satisfactory

Keiyon Brown
Kayden Harwell
Wesley Lambeth
Aleah Therrell

Ms. Rice’s Kindergarten

(All satisfactory)

Brayden King
Layla Jordan

Mrs. Dawson’s First Grade

All A’s

London Brooks
Luke Godwin
Jaycee Harvell

All A’s and B’s

Logan Jordan
Evelyn Smith
Chassity Taylor
Christian Velazquez

Ms. Thornton’s First Grade

All A’s

Wade Bailey
Elizabeth Coleman
Mary-Clayton Dawson
Savannah Hudson
Katherine Johnson
Ryder Lee
Makenzie Levins
Andrew Plant
Bree Roberson
Charlee Weaver

All A’s and B’s

Emily Carter
Easten Odom
Brynlie Shaw

Mrs. Linton’s Second Grade

All A’s

Kelan Jurey
Riley Long
Evin Matlock
Mia Turner-White

All A’s and B’s

Ayden Atallah
Gavin Beasley
Layla Brown
Jaci Jackson

Mrs. Weaver’s Second Grade

All A’s

Madeleine Atallah
Maddie Mae Driskell
Zachary Herndon
Mia Kornegay
Madison Levins
Addisen Miller
Jayden White
Brian Yoder

All A’s and B’s

Logan Bevins
Luke Diamond
Kerissa Dortch
Braden Glick
Rhett Madden
Blake Shaw

Mrs. Dunsford’s Third Grade

All A’s

Sarah Bailey
Riley Dawson
Madalyn Grimes
Kaylee Hamilton
Meredith Johnston
Tyler Riggs

All A’s and B’s

Alexa Castro
Kaylie Glick
Takayla Lewis
Tyson McBride
Aydan Smith
Leif Waters

Mrs. Gilmore and Mrs. Marshman’s Fourth Grade

All A’s

Drake Allen Driskell
Bradley Hamilton
Emily Levins
Kaden Odom
Jolee Sloan
Blake Yoder

All A’s and B’s

Leah Anderson
Hunter Barnes
Aloysia Dortch
Briana Dunsford
Kayla Johnson
Emily Lambeth
Abby Weber
Tiana White

Mrs. Johnston’s Fifth Grade:

All A’s

Hunter Borelli
Kaitlin Gafford
Jace Gifford
Shelby Rice
Harley Walker

All A’s and B’s

Cody Adams
Tanner Boone
Dusty Carnley
Taylor Levins
Torka Mills
Ahmad Warmack-Elliott
Anthoni Weaver

« Previous PageNext Page »