Jay Woman Critically Injured In Wreck Blamed On Winter Conditions

January 29, 2014

A Jay woman was critically injured in a wreck Tuesday afternoon that was blamed on winter road conditions.

The Florida Highway Patrol said 21-year old Kasey Jean Brown of Jay was traveling east on Highway 4 near Market Road about 4:58 p.m. when her 2000 Ford Focus lost traction and began to fishtail. The vehicle rotated across the center line and into the path of a westbound 2002 Jeep Cherokee. The driver of the Cherokee attempted to avoid an accident, but both vehicles collided just off the north side of the roadway.

Brown was transported to Sacred Heart Hospital in Pensacola in critical condition.

The driver of the Jeep Cherokee, 52-year old Larry M. Wiebel of Illinois received minor injuries. His passenger, 51-year old Sherry Lynn Hergert, also of Illinois, was seriously injured. Both were transported to Santa Rosa Medical Center.

The accident remains under investigation by the FHP.

Train Derails In McDavid, Tanker Cars Into Creek

January 29, 2014

A train derailment in McDavid Tuesday night ended with chemical tanker cars submerged in a creek, but resulted in no injuries and just a short evacuation for a small number of families.

FOR AN IMPORTANT UPDATE TO THIS STORY, CLICK HERE>

Twenty-three cars of a 69-car CSX train derailed about 6:20 p.m. on a north-south track almost behind the McDavid Sawmill . Reports from the scene indicated that a bridge and railroad tracks in the area were totally destroyed by the derailment.

There were no injuries to the CSX crew or anyone else in the crash.

Two tanker cars  of phosphoric acid were submerged in Fletcher Creek with other cars landing on top of them.

“After hours of close inspection, Escambia County crews have found no evidence of any chemical leaking from the derailed cars,” Escambia County PIO Bill Pearson said early Wednesday morning.

Units from the Molino and McDavid stations of Escambia Fire Rescue and the county’s Hazmat team responded to the incident.

A small number of homes on Cotton Lake Road were evacuated as a precaution, and an emergency shelter was opened by the America Red Cross at the Molino Community Complex. Just one family took advantage of the shelter before officials gave the all-clear for residents to return to the homes.

Pearsons said a crash investigation would be conducted by CSX. He said it  may take crews several weeks to make repairs to tracks at the bridge at that location.

Hard Freeze Tonight

January 29, 2014

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

  • Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 14. Northwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm after midnight.
  • Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 46. Wind chill values between 5 and 15 early. North wind around 5 mph becoming southeast in the afternoon.
  • Thursday Night: Patchy fog after midnight. Otherwise, mostly clear, with a low around 29. Calm wind.
  • Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 61. Calm wind becoming south around 5 mph in the morning.
  • Friday Night: Patchy dense fog. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a low around 48. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm.
  • Saturday: A 20 percent chance of rain. Areas of dense fog before 10am. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 69. East wind 5 to 10 mph.
  • Saturday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 56. Southeast wind around 5 mph.
  • Sunday: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a high near 70. Southeast wind around 5 mph.
  • Sunday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a low around 57. Southeast wind around 5 mph.
  • Monday: A 30 percent chance of showers. Cloudy, with a high near 69.
  • Monday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers. Cloudy, with a low around 52.
  • Tuesday: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 70.
  • Tuesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 52.
  • Wednesday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a high near 65.

Pictured: Sleet falls and accumulates Tuesday night in Walnut Hill. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Photo Gallery: Ice 2014

January 29, 2014

For a photo gallery of Tuesday night ice storm and snow photos, click here.

For photos from earlier in the day, click here

To submit your photos, visit our NorthEscambia.com Facebook page, or email news@northescambia.com

Frozen Cityscapes: Atmore, Flomaton

January 29, 2014

Here’s a look at a frozen downtown in Flomaton (above) and Atmore (below) Tuesday night. Reader submitted photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Winter Weather Shelter Open

January 29, 2014

In coordination with Escambia County Emergency Management, the American Red Cross opened a winter weather shelter Tuesday night to provide safe, warm lodging for area residents affected by power outages and frigid temperatures.

The shelter opened at East Brent Baptist Church at 4801 North Davis in Pensacola.

Disaster Program Specialist Doug Watson asks that those needing shelter bring their personal items and any special dietary products. For families with children, it’s always a good idea to bring a special blanket or stuffed animal to help them feel more at home. In addition, you may want to prepare a go-bag and include the following:

  • Medications
  • Glasses
  • Important personal paperwork
  • Cell phone and charger
  • Warm clothing
  • Sanitation/ personal care products
  • Flashlight and batteries

Road And Bridge Closures

January 29, 2014

The major road and bridge closures in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties are listed below.  Almost all other roads in the North Escambia area are covered in some combination of ice, sleet or snow. Travel is not advised.

  • Boggy Creek Bridge on County Road 97A . This is the temporary metal bridge near Enon, about 10 miles from Walnut Hill.
  • Highway 97 is closed from Arthur Brown Road to Kansas Road in Walnut Hill. There are no detours; drivers should avoid the area altogether.
  • Highway 29 is closed from Cox Road to Byrneville/Bluff Springs Road.
  • I-10 closed from Scenic Highway to Highway 87 (including Pensacola Bay Bridge)
  • Theo Baars Bridge (Perdido Key Drive) to Perdido Key – Despite the bridge closure, medical and rescue crews are available on Perdido Key for emergency situations
  • Three Mile Bridge
  • The Barrancas Bridge over Bayou Chico
  • Main Gate bridge at Pensacola NAS. Use the back gate.
  • The Bayou Texar Bridge
  • I- 10 bridge over the Perdido River is down to one lane from Alabama to Florida
  • I-10 bridge over Escambia Bay leading into Santa Rosa County has been closed in both directions
  • I-10 Bridge at Blackwater in Santa Rosa County.
  • I-10 Bridge over Perdido River from Alabama to Florida is down to one lane

Photos; Freezing Rain, Sleet, Icicles

January 29, 2014

Here are some ice, snow and freezing rain photos from across the North Escambia area. For more photos, click here.

To submit your photos, visit our NorthEscambia.com Facebook page, or email news@northescambia.com

Reader submitted and NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Pot Amendment Puts Cloud Over Anti-Seizure Marijanua Debate

January 29, 2014

Backers of a non-euphoric strain of cannabis that helps reduce seizures in children aren’t giving up on a legislative fix, but the politics of pot could make their uphill battle even steeper.

A sharply divided Florida Supreme Court on Monday approved a ballot initiative that would allow doctors to prescribe medical marijuana, rejecting arguments from Attorney General Pam Bondi, Republican legislative leaders and others that the proposal was misleading and would give doctors broad discretion over who would qualify for the pot.

Opposition to the medical marijuana proposal, which will be on the November ballot, could jeopardize the passage of a legislative measure that would legalize a marijuana extract known as “Charlotte’s Web” that proponents believe can dramatically reduce seizures in children with a rare form of epilepsy. Florida is one of a handful of states including Georgia where Republican-led legislatures are grappling with making the strain legal.

Charlotte’s Web is an extract of the marijuana derivative cannabidiol, or CBD, but is low in the psychoactive compound tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC. The strain is oil-based, can be taken orally and doesn’t get users high, unlike the medical marijuana that would be authorized under the constitutional proposal.

Backers of Charlotte’s Web are trying to draw clear lines between the two types of medical marijuana with the aim of legislative approval in Florida this spring.

Even if the medical marijuana amendment receives the 60 percent approval necessary for passage, it could be years before pot is available to patients in Florida.

That’s too long to wait, said Peyton Moseley, whose 10-year-old adopted daughter RayAnn is one of an estimated 125,000 children in Florida diagnosed with Dravet Syndrome, a rare form of epilepsy that can cause hundreds of seizures a day.

Legislative authorization “is still our daughter’s and 125,000 other Floridians’ best chance at getting this life-changing medicine quickly,” Moseley said after Monday’s court ruling. “Having the full-on legalization of medical marijuana on the ballot in November is fine and good, but if your child’s life depended on her gaining access to a certain kind of medicine, would you want to leave that decision in the hands of the voters?”

But the court’s decision to put the prescription pot question on the ballot could pose a conundrum for conservative lawmakers, already skeptical of the non-euphoric strain.

“I think after people analyze it they are going to kind of line up. They’ll either say there is a right way involving these derivatives and there’s a wrong way and contrast it with the amendment. Or they’ll say people are going to get this all mixed up and think I’m for (medical marijuana). … It depends how their district reads and how they want to be seen,” said House Judiciary Chairman Dennis Baxley, R-Ocala.

Baxley has thwarted an attempt by House Criminal Justice Chairman Matt Gaetz, who introduced the issue by holding a workshop on it last month, to include legalization of Charlotte’s Web in a larger committee bill. Baxley’s move means Charlotte’s Web would have to be approved in a stand-alone bill, which could be harder to pass. Gaetz said he intends to press ahead and that his colleagues should, too.

“I always think that politicians err when they try to start to treat the public like intellectual inferiors. It’s pretty condescending and patronizing to say that we’re not going to help 125,000 children with intractable epilepsy because we’re worried that the public is going to be confused,” Gaetz, R-Fort Walton Beach, said.

Another key distinction between the two types of medical marijuana is the potential universe of patients, said Gaetz. State economists estimated in October that about 1.5 million Floridians could be eligible for medical marijuana. Between 125,000 and 250,000 Floridians have disorders that could benefit from Charlotte’s Web, Gaetz said.

“The proposed constitutional amendment will put a dispensary in every neighborhood. My proposal wouldn’t. No one will be building marijuana dispensaries if CBD is legal,” he said.

While GOP leaders including Gov. Rick Scott have expressed empathy for families like the Moseleys, none have definitively said the Legislature should act.

“The governor feels for families struggling with terrible illness. The FDA (the U.S. Food and Drug Administration) is currently evaluating the safety and effectiveness of the medication and the governor is hopeful that families will get relief from the impacts of these serious illnesses in the safest possible way,” Scott spokeswoman Jackie Schutz said in an e-mail on Tuesday.

But Moseley, who with his wife Holley started the non-profit organization “Caring 4 Florida” to lobby for the bill and provide support to other families, said Scott is confused. Clinical trials are being tested on a similar drug called Epidiolex, which also contains CBD but, unlike Charlotte’s Web, does not contain THC.

“With a person dying every 10 minutes from epilepsy related issues, the reality is that our kids don’t have three to five years to wait on clinical trials,” Moseley said.

And, Moseley said, his daughter RayAnn has been prescribed a variety of medications that never received FDA approval for children.

“There’s less THC in this than a lot of things on our shelves at Publix,” Moseley said. “I think there’s such a negative connotation with the word cannabis or marijuana. People just have that embedded in their brains. That’s really our job, to explain to people what’s going on.”

If Gaetz, the Moseleys and other families “are successful in getting that across,” Baxley said, “then they’ll have a success story here.”

But, he cautioned, “if it gets all wrapped up in (the initiative), it could be more problematic.”

by Dara Kim, The News Service of Florida

YMCA Moving To PNJ Site

January 29, 2014

Board members of the Northwest Florida YMCA last night voted unanimously to accept a contribution of land from the Studer Community Development Group’s new property at the site of the Pensacola News Journal.  The offer of land is in addition to the $5 million Quint and Rishy Studer had pledged to the Y during last year’s effort to secure a site at the Maritime Park for the new facility.

While the land offer had been on the table for some time, the Y could not officially accept the land donation offer until the Studer Community Development Group could close on the property.  Monday’s decision was a critical step in the organization’s path toward a new facility, replacing the 60-year-old building on the corner of Palafox and Belmont Streets, according to Steve Williams, President of the YMCA Board.  The Y accepted the Studers’ offer of .9 acres on the Intendencia side of the PNJ property.

“We are so grateful for the continued generosity of Quint and Rishy Studer,” said Williams. “Their contribution last year of $5 million ranks among one of the largest single gifts to any YMCA in the country, and with this addition of a generous land offer, our dream of a new facility is one huge step closer to reality. We look forward to working with the Studers on this project and are thrilled to be a part of the great things going on in downtown Pensacola.”

According to YMCA officials, the organization has been in contact with several donors over the past several months since the City and CMPA rejected the Y’s offer to lease a parcel at the Maritime Park, and those conversations will continue as the Y undertakes a more public fundraising campaign.

“Now that we have the land secured, we are actually starting ahead of the curve,” said Williams.  “Our fundraising plan is in place, and thanks to the Studers’ generosity we will be able to do some of the initial planning and designing now while we are continuing our fundraising efforts. Being able to move now on a new facility without having to wait for that first big donation is a huge advantage for us, our members, and the people we serve in the community.”

Quint and Rishy Studer said that the Y is a perfect fit for the new property, and they are happy to support the historic organization in its quest for a new facility.

“The Y does so much good for so many people in our community – from health and wellness for all ages, to family activities and outreach to the homeless. They are a true community partner, and we’re happy to support them,” said Rishy Studer.  “This has been a long and sometimes difficult process for all of us trying to build a new Y, but despite it all, it seems like we’ve got this project back on track, and it’s exciting to think of all the possibilities a new Y could bring downtown Pensacola,” she continued.

Details of the contribution and final conveyance of the land are pending a successful closing, to be scheduled sometime in February, said YMCA officials.

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