Gas Franchise Dispute: Century Working To Analyze Pensacola Energy Data

August 26, 2014

The natural gas franchise dispute between Century and Pensacola is continuing.

Pensacola  Energy currently provides natural gas service to three schools and one commercial customer in Bratt and Walnut Hill, plus 43 residential customers — all within the Town of Century’s exclusive gas franchise area. Pensacola and Century are disputing Pensacola Energy’s continued right to serve those customers, as Century seeks a franchise extension from the Escambia County Commission for a geographic area that spans from the Escambia River westward to almost the Perdido River and from the Alabama state line southward to near Bogia.

Mayor Freddie McCall said Pensacola Energy has now provided 375 pages of public records to Matt Dannheisser,  the town’s attorney. Century will hire a private company for $2,500 to sort through the 375 pages and convert the information to usable data such as spreadsheets in order to set rates, especially for the three schools and the commercial customer.  Century’s gas system currently only has one customer on commercial rates  — a negotiated contract with the Department of Corrections for the Century Correctional Institution.

“Once we get the records on spreadsheets and other forms, we’ll be able to set rates and use that as a tool to get the county to agree to work with use to get this taken care of,” McCall said.

In order to analyze the data and set appropriate gas rates, Century will hire two city of  Gulf Breeze employees as private contractors for a total of $3,000.

The $5,500 total for data analysis and rate creation will be paid out of $11,000 the town has in a special revenue account restricted gas fund.

In April, the Escambia County Commission delayed action on the franchise agreement for Pensacola and Century to come to terms. So far, the franchise agreement has not yet come back before the commission.

Heat Relief: Lower Humidity, Temperatures Today

August 26, 2014

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

  • Tuesday Mostly sunny, with a high near 93. Northeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
  • Tuesday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 70. Southeast wind around 5 mph becoming northeast after midnight.
  • Wednesday Mostly sunny, with a high near 93. Northeast wind around 5 mph becoming southeast in the afternoon.
  • Wednesday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 69. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.
  • Thursday A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Sunny, with a high near 94. Calm wind becoming southeast around 5 mph in the morning.
  • Thursday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 71. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.
  • Friday A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 94. Calm wind becoming southeast around 5 mph in the morning.
  • Friday Night A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 73. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.
  • Saturday A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 93.
  • Saturday Night A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 73.
  • Sunday A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 89.
  • Sunday Night A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 73.
  • Labor Day A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 92.

Alabama Death Row Inmate Commits Suicide

August 26, 2014

Alabama death row inmate Justin Hosch, 26, died of an apparent suicide Monday at Holman Prison in Atmore, according to the Alabama Department of Corrections.  He was pronounced deceased in his cell.

The official cause of death is pending autopsy results from the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences.

Convicted of capital murder, Hosch was sentenced to death out of Autauga County on October 14, 2010. Hosch shot a 49-year-old Joey Willmore to death after Hosch escaped from the Frank Lee Youth center where he was being held for receiving stolen property and possession of marijuana.

Juvenile Justice Cancels Contract With Controversial Provider In Santa Rosa County

August 26, 2014

The Florida Department of Juvenile Justice has canceled a contract with a controversial operator of a 40-bed residential facility in Santa Rosa County, with potentially far-reaching implications for the way the state rehabilitates juvenile offenders.

Department officials said the Santa Rosa Substance Abuse Treatment Center hadn’t corrected problems involving safety and security for the 14- to 18-year-old boys in its program. They also pointed to the program’s failure to provide “effective behavioral interventions and appropriate reporting of incidents,” according to a news release.

In a letter to the provider, Youth Services International, the department said the facility saw four YSI staff members terminated in a two-month period for excessive or unnecessary use of force or the failure to report safety and security issues.

“I think we were very thorough in our process in identifying where the deficits were with the program,” said the department’s interim secretary, Christy Daly. “The actual decision to default on the contract was not a difficult one, because at all times we are focused on the safety of these children and holding our providers accountable.”

The canceled contract means Youth Services International can’t bid on new contracts with the state for at least 12 months.

The company continues to operate nine private, for-profit juvenile facilities in Florida, but cannot respond to a current invitation to negotiate the contract for one of them, the St. Johns Juvenile Correctional Facility.

Youth Services International did not return calls requesting comment.

“YSI is an organization that’s long been troubled,” said Roy Miller, president of the Children’s Campaign, an advocacy group. “This sends a real wake-up call — not only to them but to other providers.”

In November, the Huffington Post reported that “Florida’s Department of Juvenile Justice has continued to award tens of millions of dollars’ worth of prison contracts to YSI, despite a civil rights investigation by the Justice Department and probes into negligence and violent conditions by authorities in at least five states. In the past year alone, the company has already received four new contracts in Florida totaling nearly $37 million.”

The investigative series resulted in a successful effort during the last legislative session by Sen. Darren Soto, D-Orlando, and Sen. Rob Bradley, R-Fleming Island, to insert language in the state budget requiring the Department of Juvenile Justice to consider a contractor’s history in other states among the criteria by which the department awards its contracts.

Soto said Monday he was pleased to see the department “taking the safety and welfare of our youth more seriously,” but that he planned to return in the 2015 legislative session with a proposal that would increase the department’s number of full-time employees to allow for greater oversight of juvenile detention facilities. Soto said the measure failed in the last session due to budgetary constraints.

He added that he would be scrutinizing the department’s new contracts as well.

“No one should be doing any victory laps as long as there are facilities where youth are being abused in our system,” Soto said.

The reaction from children’s advocates was mixed as well.

“We are gratified to see DJJ take action to respond to the abuse of children in one of its privately-run facilities,” said Tania Galloni of the Southern Poverty Law Center. “Incarcerated children are at risk of mistreatment, and that is why juvenile prisons should be used sparingly, if at all. While closing one facility is a good first step, there are still far too many children exposed to abuse in for-profit juvenile prisons around Florida.”

Gordon Weekes, who as Broward County’s chief assistant public defender has investigated Youth Services International facilities, said nothing had really changed.

“In the past when they’ve shut down YSI facilities, they’ve just popped back up under a different name, with the same staff, and DJJ has absolutely no problem with that,” he said.

For instance, Weekes said, after the department did not renew its contract with Youth Service International’s Thompson Academy following charges of physical and sexual abuse, “that program reconstituted itself under a different name, right down the street.” Weekes said he saw some of the same guards transporting youths to court, and they told him they still worked for Youth Services International.
He said that the youths in Department of Juvenile Justice facilities need intervention, hands-on mentoring and attention from qualified staff. But by definition, he said, a for-profit juvenile facility has an incentive to skimp on staff salaries or operating costs — even food — at the expense of the youths in its care.

“And when you cut back on both of those areas, you get low quality,” he said.

Miller of the Children’s Campaign said virtually all juvenile providers are having “huge workforce issues” due to low qualifications and low pay.

Daly, however, said the department was dealing with its providers on an individual basis — including Youth Services International and its Santa Rosa facility. The department sent technical teams to the program, shared the deficiencies they found with Youth Services International and gave the provider the chance to make good. It did not.

“The leadership at individual programs is the critical component of program success,” Daly said. “And we do see strength at most of our programs.”

by Margie Menzel, The News Service of Florida

Lineworker Appreciation Day Was Tuesday

August 26, 2014

When Robert Duke was growing up in the Pensacola area, he spent a lot of time at a restaurant where Gulf Power linemen would come eat for lunch.

“I would talk to them a lot,” he said. “Then after Hurricane Frederick (in 1979), they came and worked in our yard. I got pumped up and said, ‘Man, I’m going to be a lineman one day.’”

Duke has been a lineman for Gulf Power for almost 27 years. As the state honors lineworkers across the state on Tuesday, August 26 with Lineworker Appreciation Day, Duke is proud that line crews are being recognized for the work they do to keep customer’s lights on.

“You’re in the field every day and not in the same place,” he said. “We work in the heat and sometimes it’s hard on your body. But it’s a good feeling knowing you are getting people’s lights on when they’re in a bind. That’s a big reward.”

Gulf Power is proud to salute its lineworkers, who work tirelessly to keep Northwest Florida’s electricity flowing.

“Gulf Power crews do a great job of keeping the lights on — but they’re often called away from their families to work nights and holidays to restore power following storms or traffic accidents for example,” said Wendell Smith, Gulf Power vice president of Power Delivery. “These men and women are truly heroes and this day is to honor them.”

Gulf Power has approximately 175 employees who work on the company’s transmission and distribution lines, which total more than 9,300 miles.

They have been especially busy this year in addition to their regular duties. Many were called away from their families in February during the ice storm in Pensacola and again in April when the floodwaters hit. In both events, they were able to restore power in less than 48 hours while working in hazardous conditions.

In 2012, the state Legislature made August 26 Lineworker Appreciation Day in Florida. It was created through the efforts of lawmakers and Tracy Moore, the widow of a Lakeland lineman, who was killed while working.

Part of Gulf Power’s mission is to lend assistance to other companies when natural disasters knock power out to hundreds of thousands of customers. Earlier this year, Gulf Power sent lineworkers to assist its sister company Georgia Power for a week following an ice storm. In 2013, Gulf Power sent crews out of state to assist other utilities on two different occasions. One of those was a trip to Alabama in March following a series of tornadoes. In December, crews worked to restore power in the Dallas area following an ice storm.

“Our award-winning lineworkers are committed to keeping the lights on, whether here in Northwest Florida or across the country,” Smith said. “That’s what they do and we’re proud they are being recognized for their efforts.”

NorthEscambia.com and submitted photos, click to enlarge.

Florida Workers Comp Rates Could Be Trimmed

August 26, 2014

Florida employers could see the first overall reduction in workers-compensation insurance rates in four years.

An overall 2.5 percent decrease has been proposed by the National Council on Compensation Insurance, the state announced. The decrease is expected to be discussed during a public hearing in October.

Manufacturers could see the biggest drop, 3.2 percent, under the proposal. The contracting industry is lined up for a 2.9 percent decrease, and office and clerical services would get a 1.3 percent drop, according to a statement from NCCI.

The proposal, if approved by the state Office of Insurance Regulation, would take effect in January. Last year, the overall rate grew 0.7 percent, which was slightly lower than a proposed 1 percent increase. The approval followed annual increases of 6.1 percent, 8.9 percent and 7.8 percent in the three previous years.

by The News Service of Florida

Florida, Alabama Officers Pledge To Crack Down On Drunk, Unsafe Driving

August 26, 2014

Law enforcement agencies from Florida and Alabama met Monday at the I-10 Florida Welcome Center to mark the kickoff of the “Hands Across the Border” campaign toe promote safe Labor Day driving.

Drunk driving is one of America’s deadliest crimes – in 2013, there were nearly 1,000 alcohol related fatalities across Florida, according to Florida’s Department of Transportation.

Officers both states pledged Monday to work together this holiday weekend to ensure drivers are maintaining safe speeds, not drinking and driving and always using their safety belts.

“Every year, and every holiday weekend, we continue to see far too many people suffer debilitating injuries and loss of life as a result of impaired driving,” said Tim Roberts, Florida Law Enforcement Liaison representative for the Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over campaign. “This careless disregard for human lives must stop, which is why Florida and Alabama’s law enforcement agencies will be arresting impaired drivers wherever and whenever they find them during the Labor Day holiday.”

Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Northwest Escambia Chiefs Open Play In Excel Jamboree

August 26, 2014

The Northwest Escambia Chiefs traveled to Excel this past Saturday for a Jamboree at Excel (AL) High School.

Results were as follows:

Freshman Team
Lost vs. Excel
Won vs. Neal

Sophomore Team
Lost vs. Excel
Lost vs. Neal

Junior Team
Lost vs. Excel
Won vs. Neal

Senior Team
Won vs. Excel
Won vs. Neal

The regular season for the Northwest Escambia Chiefs (formerly the Eagles) will open August 30 at Flomaton with games at 4 p.m., 5:15 p.m., 6:45 p.m., and 8:15 p.m. The Chiefs won’t play their first home games in Northview’s Tommy Weaver Memorial Stadium on Saturday, September 13.

Submitted photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Wahoos Lose To Biscuits

August 26, 2014

Kyle Waldrop became the first Pensacola Blue Wahoos player this season to earn the Southern League’s Player of the Week honors Monday.

As if that wasn’t enough, Waldrop lined a double to centerfield that scored Yorman Rodriguez and tied him for the franchise record of seven consecutive games with an RBI.

The Pensacola Blue Wahoos (56-78), though, failed to overtake the Montgomery Biscuits (64-70) and lost, 4-3, Monday in front of 3,074 fans at Pensacola Bayfront Stadium. The last home game of the regular season starts at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Waldrop has been on a hitting tear and for the week ending Sunday, August 24 was recognized as the league’s top player by Minor League Baseball. During the week, the left-handed hitter batted .533 (16-for-33) with two home runs, three doubles and a triple and a slugging percentage of .900.

“I’ve always felt in the second half I’ve done well,” Waldrop said. “‘Finish strong is my motto. I’m more patient and looking for a certain pitch to put good swings on the ball.”

The 22-year-old Waldrop now has an eight-game hitting streak, including six multi-hit games. Over the past week, he has raised his average 37 points to .309. His average is tops on the team and his 33 RBI leads the team since the All-Star break.

“He’s a solid hitter,” said Walt Jocketty, the Cincinnati Reds president of baseball operations and general manager, who was visiting Pensacola. “He’s proven he can come up here and make adjustments. If he does that, he will keep moving up.”

The left-handed hitting Waldrop was part of a group of seven High-A Bakersfield players who joined the Wahoos after the All-Star break. He was leading the California League with a .359 average.

Pensacola Manager Delino DeShields said Waldrop impressed him the most among the Bakersfield seven.

“Of all those guys, he was the most ready coming in and it shows,” DeShields said. “He was swinging the bat that way in Bakersfield and is making the adjustments faster than the others.”

Waldrop isn’t the only hot-hitting Blue Wahoos player. Yorman Rodriguez also is swinging a big stick, smacking a solo home run to right field Monday to go along with two doubles and a single in a 4-4 night and he scored all three Wahoos runs.

Rodriguez smacked home runs in three straight games against the Jacksonville Suns in the last series and now has nine homers on the year. In addition, the 22-year-old outfielder has an 11-game hitting streak, hitting .486 (18-37) with four home runs and 11 RBI.

The Venezuelan said through interpreter Yovan Gonzalez, the team’s catcher, that he has been taking extra hitting in the batting cages and working with hitting coach Alex Palaez.

“I’m throwing my hands hard through the ball and I’ve been successful doing that,” Rodriguez said. “I’m also being more patient, especially as the leadoff hitter.”

DeShields praised both Rodriguez and Waldrop for their hot hitting lately.

“They’re both playing at a high level right now,” he said.

The final home game of the 2014 season is against the Tampa Bay Rays Double-A affiliate the Montgomery Biscuits and gets underway at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. RHP Michael Lorenzen (4-6, 3.09) takes the mound for the Wahoos and is scheduled to be opposed by the Biscuits RHP Victor Mateo (12-9, 3.61).

by Tommy Thrall

Firefighters Battle Shed Fire

August 25, 2014

Fire destroyed a storage shed at a home near Walnut Hill Monday afternoon.

A shed located in the front yard of a home in the 3600 block of Seals Road was reported to be engulfed in flames about 5:25 p.m. The approximately 10×20 shed had burned to the ground by the time the first firefighters arrived minutes later.

There were no injuries and no damage to any other structures.

Pictured top: Firefighters pull a hose line to begin fighting shed fire Monday afternoon near Walnut Hill. Pictured below: The shed was already on the ground when firefighters arrived. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

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