Libraries Offer Spooky Fun, Other Halloween And Fall Events Scheduled

October 28, 2014

The Molino Branch Library will offer a little spooky fun  this week, as will the Century Health and Rehab Center. And local churches will hold fall festivals, including events in Cantonment and Molino.

Molino Branch Library

The Molino Branch Library will present “It Happened One Night at the Molino Museum” at 6 p.m. Friday. Kids and enjoy a night of skits, spooky stories and trick or treating — and visit the spooky Molino Museum if they dare.

Century Halloween Carnival And Haunted House

The Century Health and Rehab Center  at 6020 Industrial Blvd in Century, will hold a Halloween Carnival and Haunted House, Thursday, October 30, from 3 until 5 p.m. for a scary kids program and 5 until 7 p.m. for a  terrifying kids program. Lots of food, games and prizes. Call (850) 256-1540 for more information.

Pine Forest Assembly/Cantonment Fall Festival

The Pine Forest Assembly of God Church at 3125 Pine Forest Road in Cantonment will hold a Fall Festival on Friday from 6-8 p.m. with free food, games, prizes and lots of fun.

Molino Community Fall Festival

A community wide fall festival will be held Friday  at Victory Assembly of God church in Molino from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. There will be lots of food, fun, games, trunk-or treat, and a hayride. The event is sponsored by Highland Baptist Church, Victory Assemby of God, Crossfaith Church and Molino First Assembly of God. The event is free and everyone is invited.

Bratt Assembly Fall Festival

A Fall Festival will be held at Bratt Assembly of God on Friday beginning at 6 p.m.

NorthEscambia.com file photo.

Charges Dropped Against Cantonment Burglary Suspect

October 28, 2014

Charges have been dropped against  Flomaton man arrested after his girlfriend posted a “selfie” Facebook photo that the victims believed to show stolen goods in the background.

All charges in the case were dropped against Colby Wayne Satterwhite, 22, according to the State Attorney’s Office. at the request of the victims.

Residents of a home in the 300 block of Jacks Branch Road reported that their home had been burglarized sometime during a two day period in which they were gone. They returned home to find a exterior door pushed open, and missing items including $200 in cash, a large collection of collectable coins, a camera, a Mossberg shotgun in a tan case and ammunition. The total estimated value of missing items was $15,060.

Acting on a tip, the burglary victims checked the Facebook page of Satterwhite’s girlfriend and spotted what they believed to be her shotgun case in the background of one of the girlfriend’s “selfie” photographs.

But now, the State Attorney’s Office said, the victims no longer believe Satterwhite was involved in the crime. They have instead raised allegations against another individual who has not been charged.

Register Now: Major Leaguer Caleb Gindl To Hold Baseball Clinic

October 28, 2014

Northview Baseball and Major Leaguer Caleb Gindl of the Milwaukee Brewers will present a fall baseball clinic for ages 9-17. Participants will receive professional instruction and on the field experience while supporting the Northview Chiefs baseball program.

The clinic will be held Saturday, November 8 from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. at the Northview baseball complex. The cost is $40 per participant. Pre-register by November 1 for a free clinic t-shirt.

For more information or to register, call the Northview Diamond Club at (850) 554-8594.

Pictured: The Milwaukee Brewer’s Caleb Gindl hits during a baseball clinic last year at Northview High School in Bratt. NorthEscambia.com file photo, click to enlarge.

Argument Over A Dollar Lands Man Behind Bars

October 28, 2014

A dispute over a dollar payment that involved fake coins for cigarettes ended with an Escambia County man behind bars.

John Henry Hardy, 73,  was charged with two counts of aggravated assault, one count of aggravated battery, and one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.The incident occurred around 8:30 a.m. at Attucks Court. Pensacola Police Lt. Chuck Mallett said two women, both aged 24, got into an argument this morning with Hardy after one of them bought a couple of  cigarettes from him Sunday night and paid for them with fake coins.

This morning, Hardy saw the 24-year-old woman who had paid him with the fake money at a store, argued with her and then returned to his apartment where he retrieved a shotgun. As the  two 24-year-old women walked past his apartment, he confronted them again and one of the women gave him a real dollar in payment.

Mallett said the women then realized Hardy had a shotgun and fled the scene. He fired one time, and a pellet grazed a 19-year-old bystander on the arm. She drove herself to a hospital for treatment.

Hardy left the area in his car but turned himself in around 11 a.m. at police headquarters. He was booked into the Escambia County Jail with bond set at $15,000.

Scott, Crist Duel Over Past And Future Of Economy

October 28, 2014

Long before the flare-up over Charlie Crist’s fan earlier this month, Republican Gov. Rick Scott’s campaign had been dogged by an earlier debate moment — one from four years ago, when he was asked to elaborate on his promise to create 700,000 jobs in seven years.

The moderator at the debate used the first question for Scott to point out that economists already expected Florida to add more than 700,000 jobs over the next seven years. After the usual opening greetings, Scott made it clear what his promise meant.

“So, our plan is seven steps to 700,000 jobs,” Scott said. “And that plan is on top of what normal growth would be.”

The moderator, Antonio Mora, pushed Scott a bit. Economists expected the state to add about a million jobs, so another 700,000 jobs would mean that Florida would have an additional 1.7 million openings over the next seven years, Mora noted, in a state where 1 million people were unemployed at the time.

Scott didn’t correct Mora. “We’re going to grow the state,” he responded, then began ticking off the virtues of doing business in Florida.

Even before this year’s campaign, when Scott’s biggest talking-point is his record of job creation, the exchange with Mora was repeatedly walked back after the governor settled into office. In a statement issued in October 2011, Scott said his promise was “the creation of 700,000 jobs over seven years regardless of what the economy might otherwise gain or lose” — a slight change in phrasing that altered the meaning of the promise.

That is largely the definition his campaign is sticking by now — while adding in a dig at Crist, the former governor and Scott’s Democratic opponent, who oversaw a job market hammered by the economic downturn.

“Normal growth under Charlie Crist, when Governor Scott was running, was negative. … The fact is, over the last 3.5 years, we have created over 640,000 private sector jobs. Normal growth under Charlie Crist was losing 832,000 jobs, so under that scenario, if Charlie hadn’t run away from his job as governor, we could have lost 2 million jobs,” spokeswoman Jackie Schutz said recently in an email.

Scott’s focus on private sector jobs also omits a drop of about 29,000 government jobs from January 2011 to August 2014, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The economy might not be the dominant issue in this election that it was in 2010, when the state’s unemployment rate ballooned into double-digits and Scott ran almost exclusively on a promise of more jobs. Nowhere is that more clear than in Scott’s “Florida 2020 Plan,” released Monday, which packages the promises the governor has made over the last several months into what his campaign describers as a vision.

That plan includes pledges on education funding, early learning and the environment in addition to economic items like $1 billion in tax reductions and investment in Florida’s infrastructure. In something that would have been almost unthinkable four years ago, Scott’s statement announcing the vision includes increasing employment as just one of the things the plan would promote.

“I get to travel the state every day and talk to people all over Florida about what they want — they want to move our state forward,” Scott said. “The Florida 2020 plan is just that — a clear vision to move Florida forward, to continue building our state to be the best place in the country to find a great job, start a family, and give our kids a world-class education.”

But the economy is still an issue, and the achievements Florida has seen under the 7-7-7 plan — or at least the parts of it that Scott has been able to push through the Legislature — are still likely to be on voters’ minds as they cast their ballots, either during the current early-voting period or on Nov. 4.

Crist’s campaign, of course, tries to hold Scott to the higher numbers of 1.7 million jobs — and argues that, by that metric, Scott is on pace to fall short of his goal.

“Rick Scott didn’t just move the goalpost to cheat Floridians, he pretended it was never there,” Kevin Cate, a spokesman for Crist, said in an email.

In fact, the number of jobs in Florida is right around what a University of Central Florida center projected for Florida four years ago, if not a tick below. The July 2010 forecast called for the state to have 7.9 million non-farm jobs in 2014. According to the latest numbers from the state Department of Economic Opportunity, Florida had about 7.8 million non-farm jobs in September.

In reality, said Sean Snaith — the director of the University of Central Florida’s Institute for Economic Competitiveness who is a high-profile forecaster and an economist frequently cited by the Scott campaign — it’s very difficult to tease out the effects of any governor’s policies on the state’s recovery.

“The outcomes we observe in Florida’s economy are a combination of factors that mix together sort of like the ingredients in (an) omelet,” he said.

Whether that matters to voters or not is another matter. In a poll in late August by the Bob Graham Center for Public Service at the University of Florida, the school’s Bureau of Economic and Business Research, the Tampa Bay Times and Bay News 9, 71 percent of the people polled said they believe the governor has a “great deal of control” over the economy.

Further complicating the question of whether Scott is on track to add as many jobs as he promised is that many of the promises he made as part of the 7-7-7 plan are incomplete or seemingly dead. Scott said he would try to get a biennial budget through the Legislature instead of an annual spending plan, but lawmakers never went along and Schutz suggested it wouldn’t be a priority in a second term.

“Governor Scott did propose a biennial budget during his first year, but the Legislature did not go along with it,” she said.

Another goal of Scott’s appears far from reality. The governor had promised to phase out the corporate income tax over seven years, something that was estimated to be a $1.8 billion hit to the state budget, by reducing the rate. Instead, lawmakers have whittled away at the tax, increasing the exemption and costing the state tens of millions of dollars at a time.

“The governor is committed to phasing (out) the corporate income tax and has made it a priority every year to get it reduced,” Schutz said. “And we have made great progress — more than 70% do not have to pay it now.”

In the meantime, Crist has focused on his “Fair Shot Florida” plan, which Cate said “promises to refocus the state on growing the middle class. That includes lowering the cost of living, raising the minimum wage, and investing in local small businesses.”

Crist has focused on increasing the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour — something polls show is politically popular — but his plans also include a list of other ideas, from funding for business incubators to recreating an Office of Small Business Advocacy to expanding eligibility for the state’s Medicaid program.

“People like Rick Scott are fine — it’s the middle class that is hurting because of low-wages and the high cost of living,” Cate said.

But Crist has his own record to deal with. When he was governor, the state shed hundreds of thousands of jobs and saw unemployment jump from 3.5 percent in January 2007 to a high of 11.4 percent in 2010; it declined slightly and was at 11.1 percent in December 2010, Crist’s last full month in office.

Crist has downplayed that, most recently at the third and final debate between himself and Scott. In response to a question from CNN anchor Jake Tapper, Crist said he doesn’t believe he was to blame for those job losses.

“And what Rick Scott doesn’t get is the fact that, even though he talks about creating more than 600,000 jobs, I was not responsible for the global economic meltdown any more than Rick was responsible for the national economic recovery,” Crist said.

by Brandon Larrabee, The News Service of Florida

Florida Wants To Make Case Again On Childrens’ Health Care

October 28, 2014

Pointing to a new managed-care system and changes stemming from the Affordable Care Act, attorneys for the state are asking a federal judge to dig back into whether Florida properly provides care to children in the Medicaid program.

The Agency for Health Care Administration, the Department of Health and the Department of Children and Families last week filed court documents asking federal judge Adalberto Jordan to consider new evidence in a nearly decade-old case that centers on the adequacy of care provided to low-income children through Medicaid.

Jordan has not ruled in the case, which was filed in 2005 and has been spearheaded by the Florida Pediatric Society. But the court documents filed last week indicate that Jordan could issue his findings soon.

In two motions filed Thursday, the state agencies contend that the Medicaid program has undergone significant changes since evidence was presented in 2012. In part, that is because the state this year finished putting in place a new system that requires almost all Medicaid beneficiaries to enroll in HMOs or other types of managed-care plans.

In one of the motions, the Agency for Health Care Administration and the Department of Health argued that managed-care plans are required to have adequate networks of physicians and other types of service providers.

In the past, a longstanding complaint about the Medicaid program was that beneficiaries often had problems finding health-care providers, such as specialists, who would treat them. A key issue in the lawsuit is whether care has been hampered by low Medicaid payment rates to physicians.

“Since the trial there have been a multitude of significant changes to the Florida Medicaid service delivery system that affect the issues in this case, and that render the existing record on liability stale,” attorneys for the two agencies wrote in the motion.

But in July, Jordan rejected a request by the state to declare the case moot — a request that focused, in part, on the shift to statewide managed care. At the time, Jordan wrote that the managed-care system would not be in “full swing” until Oct. 1.

“At this time nobody knows whether or not the new managed care system will alleviate or solve the issues that the plaintiffs have been complaining about for years,” Jordan wrote. “Without a developed factual record on how the managed care system is working (or not working), it is impossible to declare any part of this case moot.”

The new motion by AHCA and the Department of Health asked that the case be reopened to provide more evidence, not that the case be determined moot.

But the Department of Children and Families raised the possibility that part of the lawsuit could be declared moot. That part deals with the department’s determination of Medicaid eligibility for children.

The department cited a new computer system and other changes that were an outgrowth of the federal Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare. While Gov. Rick Scott and the Republican-controlled Legislature opposed the controversial health law, the department said in last week’s motion that the state has made important changes in how Medicaid eligibility determinations are performed and that the changes were “driven largely” by the federal measure.

by Jim Saunders, The News Service of Florida

Vera Lee Huggins Davidson

October 28, 2014

Vera Lee Huggins Davidson, 85, of Panama City and formerly of Molino, peacefully passed from this world and into the presence of her Lord Jesus Christ on October 26, 2014.

Vera was born on September 5, 1929, in Wildfork, AL to the late Bessie Bama Huggins and Wilburn Phillip Huggins. Vera dedicated her life to her family, ensuring that everyone she came into contact with was greeted with her beautiful smile and was never left wanting for love. She will be remembered as one of the most thoughtful and caring souls to ever grace this Earth, and a woman who truly put others before herself. Memories of the way she enthusiastically enjoyed working in her garden, how she skillfully prepared holiday meals for her family and the way she expressed her love for “old timey” music by humming along as she went through her day, will never be forgotten and will forever bring joy to the hearts of all who knew her. She was God’s perfect example of what people in this world should be.

Vera is preceded in death by her father, Wilburn Phillip Huggins; mother, Bessie Bama Huggins; sisters, Lillie Mae Mooney, Adel White, Era Silcox and Faye Turner; brothers, Wesley, Floyd, and Harvey Huggins; grandson, James Edward Davidson Jr.; husband, James Robert Davidson; daughter, Patricia Sager; and son, James Edward Davidson.

She is survived by her grandchildren, Larry and Barry Sager and Kevin Davidson; great-grandchildren, Kenneth, Dillon, Dalton, Danielle and Arissa Sager; son-in-law Roosevelt Sager; daughter-in-law, Cathy Davidson, and numerous other nieces, nephews and family.

Visitation will be from 10 a.m. until 12 p.m. on Thursday, October 30, 2014 with funeral services to start immediately afterwards at Petty Funeral Homes. Family friend Joe Welch will be officiating.

Petty-Eastside Chapel Funeral Homes is in charge of all arrangements.

Kenneth Steven Blackmon

October 28, 2014

Kenneth Steven Blackman age 46 of Jay, was reunited with his parents and ushered into the presence of his Savior and Lord on October 27, 2014. He was a lifelong resident of Jay and a member of Mt. Carmel United Methodist Church. He was employed 24 years as an educator in the Santa Rosa County School System. He was currently serving as Dean of Students at Sims Middle School in Pace. He was a loving brother, uncle, and friend to those who knew him.

He worked tirelessly to teach math to the students of Pace and tutored kids late into the night most days. He gave up Saturdays to build rockets with math and science students, chaperoned field trips, and encouraged those around him. He always put others first and was dearly loved by his students and co-workers. His faithfulness to God and his church were evident to all who knew him. He taught Sunday School for many years and sang in the choir. Family was also very important to him, and he always told everyone how much he loved his family and how proud he was of his niece and nephews. He will be truly missed by all who knew and loved him.

He is preceded in death by his parents, Talmadge and Mavis Blackman; grandparents, Floyd and Wavie Salter, Stephen Blackman, and Mart and Earlene Jernigan; and Aunt Hilda (Larry) Williamson.

He is survived by his two brothers, Stan (Belinda) Blackman and Greg Blackman; niece and nephews, Robin, Caleb, and Levi; aunts, Dean(Jerry) McGee and Joan (Barry) Warrick.

Pallbearers are Tim Wooten, Dale Anderson, John Waren, Burlin Findley, Joe McCurdy, Chad Arrant, Bart Hendricks, and Jake Gibbs.

Honorary pallbearers will be the Adult I Sunday School Class of Mt. Carmel United Methodist Church.

Friends and family are invited to attend a visitation from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m. on Wednesday, October 29, 2014, at the new Cornerstone Christian Church on Hwy. 89 (Alabama Street) in Jay.

Funeral services will be held at 4 p.m. on Thursday, October 30, 2014, at the new Cornerstone Christian Church with Reverend Ladon Hall and Reverend Lennie Howard officiating.

Burial will follow at Mt. Carmel United Methodist Church Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made in memory of Ken to the Mount Carmel United Methodist Church Building Fund, PO Box 127, Jay, FL 32565, or in person at United Bank in Jay.

The family would like to extend their gratitude to the doctors, nurses, and staff at Baptist Hospital for their care of Ken during his illness.

Authorites Seek Son-In-Law In Shooting Of Alabama Pastor

October 27, 2014

THE SUSPECT IN THIS INCIDENT HAS BEEN ARRESTED. CLICK FOR AN UPDATE.

Authorities are searching for a  man in connection with a murder of a pastor this morning in Escambia County, AL.

The shooting occurred a the Book of Acts Holiness Church on Jimmy Sellers Road, just north of the Florida line about 15 miles northwest of Munson, FL. Responding deputies found 69-year old Paul Phillips suffering from a gunshot wound from a shotgun. He passed away a short time later. Phillips was reportedly the pastor of the small church

A warrant for an open count of murder has been issued for the arrest of Phillips’ son-in-law, 46-year old Brett Richard Yeiter, a resident of nearby Little Paul Lane in Santa Rosa County.  Authorities said he may be driving a white, mid 90’s Eddie Bauer Edition Ford F150 regular cab truck with no license plate.

Escambia County (AL) Chief Deputy asked that residents of the area be alert for Yeiter, adding that it was unknown if his direction of travel was into Florida or in Alabama. He especially asked that hunters be alert for the possibility that he could be hiding out in a wooded area such as the Blackwater State Forest which surrounds Yeiter’s residence on three sides.

Anyone with information on Yeiter’s whereabouts is asked to contact their local law enforcement agency, 911 or the Escambia County (AL) Sheriff’s Office at (251) 809-0741.

New Traffic Signal On Nine Mile Road At New Federal Way

October 27, 2014

A new traffic signal on Nine Mile Road at Navy Federal Way is now active. The signal was in a flash mode for the past week to acquaint motorists with the location.

The new signal is mounted on strain poles with signal heads in the vertical position, according to the Florida Department of Transportation. Drivers are urged to use caution when approaching the intersection.

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