Susan “Sue” Owen Garris

June 9, 2015

Susan “Sue” Owen Garris, age 65, of Pensacola, went to her eternal home in heaven June 5, 2015. She was a member of Marcus Pointe Baptist Church.

Sue is survived by her husband and best friend of nearly 30 years, Jerry Garris; three children, Thomas F. Owen, Lynda (Kevin) Bradley, Dannell (Kevin) Jeffers; step-daughters, Tammy (John) Oreskovic and Leslie Smith; grandchildren, Steven, Corey, Kayla, Rylee, and Brooke; great-grandbabies, Ella, Jaelyn, and Tucker; two sisters and one brother; and best friend, Nancy Patrick.

In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to Marcus Pointe Baptist Church’s building fund.

A visitation will be held from 10 a.m. until the memorial service begins at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, June 10, 2015, at Trahan Family Funeral Home.

“Casual” is the preferred dress.

Trahan Family Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Catherine Louise Hold

June 9, 2015

Catherine Louise Holt, 93, passed away Sunday, June 7, 2015. She was born in Uriah, AL to Caleb and Jessie Etheridge Turk, on November 12, 1921. She was retired from Western Union, as a telegraph operator.

Mrs. Holt spent most of her life in Mobile and Daphne and has been a resident of DeFuniak Springs for the past ten years. She was a member of Southwide Baptist Church.

She is survived by her siblings, Louquin Hendrix of Carrier MS, Rebecca Chavers and Rose Mulinax of Mobile; Jo Ann Cooke of Atlanta, GA and Billy Turk of Panama City, FL.

She is preceded in death by siblings, Sarah Senterfitt ,Charles and Mabry Turk, Irene Massingill and Doris McGahagin.

Graveside services will be held at Poplar Springs Baptist Church Cemetery, Uriah on Wednesday, June 10, 2015, at 10:30 a.m. with her brother, Billy Turk officiating.

In lieu of flowers donations can be made to the Southwide Baptist Church DeFuniak Springs, FL or Polar Springs Baptist Church in Uriah, AL.

A special thanks to her loving and care giving nephews, Dale and Ray Senterfitt.

Arrangements are being provided by Johnson Quimby Funeral Home of Atmore.

Firefighters Battle Midday Trash And Truck Fire In Cantonment

June 8, 2015

Firefighters were called just before noon to battle a trash and truck fire in Cantonment.

The driver of a sanitation truck dumped his burning load near Muscogee Road and Nowak Road. Dumping the load appeared to have saved the truck, which was quickly extinguished.  A large amount of smoke was created by the burning trash pile, creating visibility problems for drivers in the area.

There were no injuries reported.

The Cantonment and Ensley stations of Escambia Fire Rescue responded to the fire, while the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office was dispatched to assist with traffic control due to smoke.

Reader submitted photos by Josh Black for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

5-Year Old Dies After Jeep Hits Bicyclist In Beulah

June 8, 2015

A 5-year old girl has passed away from injuries she received when she fell off her bicycle and was hit by a Jeep.

According to the Florida Highway Patrol, Harleigh Lynn Cheyenne Crenshaw pedaled her Lil Gem bicycle toward a Jeep Wrangler driven by 37-year old Ruby Louise Shelby on a private dirt roadway just off Beulah Road Saturday night. As the bicycle began began to travel along the side of the Jeep, Crenshaw fell off the bicycle and into the path of the left rear tire of the vehicle.

At 12:41 Sunday Morning, Crenshaw was pronounced deceased at Sacred Heart Hospital, according to information released Monday afternoon by the FHP.

Any charges are pending the outcome of a traffic homicide investigation, according to FHP.

Elderly Driver Killed After Drifting Into Oncoming Traffic

June 8, 2015

An 80-year old Pensacola man died after his vehicle drifted into oncoming traffic on Mobile Highway Saturday afternoon.

According to the Florida Highway Patrol, 80-year old Sam Rutledge was eastbound on Mobile Highway at New Warrington Road about 3:48 p.m. when he drifted into the path of an oncoming Ford van occupied by 10 people, causing a head-on collision. Rutledge was transported to Baptist Hospital where he later died.

The driver of the van, 24-year old Jasmin Jordan, and one passenger, 22-year old Denmarieuis Simmons, were transported to Sacred Heart Hospital in stable conditon.

Escambia River’s Gator Grand Slam

June 8, 2015

This Escambia River gator grand slam from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Fish and Wildlife Research Institute is not for the faint of heart.

FWC freshwater fisheries researchers and herpetologists recently caught an alligator gar, alligator snapping turtle and an American alligator while conducting different studies at the same time on the Escambia River.  American alligators are found in all 67 counties in Florida, but alligator gar and alligator snapping turtles are far less common.

Fnding alligator gar can be a challenge, but it’s one biologists with the Fish and Wildlife Research Institute are taking on to learn more about the population of the fish in Florida.

Alligator gar have historically resided in rivers and brackish waters throughout the southeastern U.S. from the Florida Panhandle – from the Apalachicola River west to the Perdido River – to Texas and Mexico. Since the mid-1900s, alligator gar numbers have declined, leaving populations in only half of the 14 states they once inhabited. The FWC acknowledged this in 2006, prohibiting harvest of alligator gar for all but scientific purposes.

Since 2010, FWRI researchers have been tagging alligator gar in the Escambia River to learn more about their movement and habitat use. Using large-mesh gill nets, researchers collect adult alligator gar and fit them with telemetry tags before releasing them back into the river. These tags transmit information through radio and sound signals, allowing researchers to track each individual’s location for about two years.

Three years into the study, researchers have tagged 22 alligator gar ranging from 11 pounds to a state record 132 pounds; tagged fish average 60 pounds. Researchers are trying to identify what habitats these fish prefer, how far they travel and whether they return to the same location over time. Preliminary tracking data indicate alligator gar are highly mobile and can travel more than 40 miles in a single week.

The data also reveal their movement and habitat use varies by season. In winter, the tagged fish tend to reside in a slough – a cove off the main river with no current – and move very little. As the season changes to spring, they begin traveling the river’s main channel but return repeatedly to the slough. Only in late spring did the gar venture from their home-base slough and begin cruising. Biologists recorded alligator gar moving as far north as Century and the Alabama state line and as far south as Escambia Bay during this time.

Courtesy photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Woman Abucted In Pensacola Found In Texas, One Arrested

June 8, 2015

A woman who was abducted Sunday night in Pensacola has been located in Texas, and the man who allegedly abducted her has been arrested.

Eric Ray Ramos, age unavailable, was arrested late this morning in Harrison County, TX, after law enforcement officers spotted the vehicle they were traveling in headed 0westbound on I-20. He has been charged with battery and kidnapping.

The female victim, whose age also is not available, was in the vehicle. Her name is not being released because she is believed to be in a relationship with Ramos. Ramos and the female were last known to live in Grand Prairie, TX.

The investigation began Sunday night after Pensacola Police were notified at 7:56 p.m. that a man and woman were arguing at the Day’s Inn, 710 North Palafox Street. As officers were responding to the scene, dispatchers received multiple calls that a Hispanic male was pushing a Hispanic female into a vehicle.

The vehicle left the scene before officers arrived, but was spotted being driven at a high rate of speed toward Tarragona Street and on I-110. The vehicle was last seen westbound on I-1000 at a high rate of speed around 8:11 p.m. near the Highway 29 overpass.

The Pensacola Police Department, Federal Bureau of Investigation and Harrison (TX) Sheriff’s Office are working together on the investigation.

Pictured: Abduction suspect Eric Ray Ramos as seen in a photograph provided by the Pensacola Police Department.

Movie Night For Grown Ups At The Library Tuesday

June 8, 2015

In celebration of heroes, the West Florida Public Libraries will hold a movie night Tuesday at the Molino and Tryon branch libraries.

Pay It Forward - starring Helen Hunt, Haley Joel Osment and Kevin Spacey – will be presented at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Molino Branch Library in the auditorium. Rated PG-13, 126 minutes.

Iron Man - starring Robert Downey Jr., Jeff Bridges and Gwyneth Paltrow – will be presented at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Tryon Branch Libary in Meeting Room A. Rated PG-13, 125 minutes

Admission is free.

Local Robotics Teams Places 2nd, Claims $1 Million Prize, In Global Contest

June 8, 2015

Three years of almost non-stop work paid off Saturday when the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition of Escambia County placed second — and claimed a $1 million prize –  in a $3.5 million global robotics competition held in Pomona, Calif.

Team IHMC’s semi-autonomous robot, nicknamed “Running Man,” on Saturday bested 21  other teams from around the world by driving a car, walking over debris, cutting a hole in a wall, turning a valve for a fire hose and climbing stairs — all with spotty communications between man and machine. The course simulated a disaster area in which humans could not safely operate.

“I am incredibly proud of our robotics team,” said IHMC CEO/Director Ken Ford. “They did an amazing job finishing second overall and were first among the Atlas teams.”
The Robotics Challenge, the third and final trial since 2013, was sponsored by DARPA, the Defense Advance Research Projects Agency. The first-place team, Team KAIST from South Korea, was awarded $2 million. It also completed all eight tasks, but did so six minutes faster than the IHMC robot. IHMC, which finished the course in just over 50 minutes Saturday, will bring home $1 million in prize money. A chimp-like robot from Carnegie Mellon University
placed third. Only three teams completed all eight tasks.

Unlike some of the other robots, which moved on wheels or four legs, IHMC’s machine employed a large, bipedal machine known as an Atlas robot that had to walk on two legs. After it  fell twice Friday in its first run through the course, IHMC’s 23-member team worked through the night to resolve the problems and replace part of an arm and a leg.

“It was pretty damaged after Friday’s falls, so we had to take it slow today,” IHMC computer scientist and team member Doug Stephen said Saturday night. “Part of the physical structure was bent, so it was throwing off some of the alignment. So we didn’t think we’d get even two tasks done today, much less all eight.”

“Everyone is over the moon now,” Stephen said. “We’re super-happy.”

Organizers of the much-anticipated event said the advances made by IHMC and other teams mark the start of a new era in the science of robotics.

Humans “get most of our ideas about robotics from science fiction. (Today) we want to show a little bit of science fact,” Gill Pratt, director of the event, told the Associated Press. While Hollywood has portrayed robots as agile and self-thinking, the machines are only now  beginning to make strides toward that ideal, and the competition was designed to push the  research forward, organizers said.

The 6-foot, 2-inch Atlas robot used by IHMC was built by Boston Dynamics. But the software and controls were produced by institute researchers Jerry Pratt, John Carff, Peter Neuhaus, Matt Johnson and others. After the second round of the robotics challenge in late 2013, that software was considered so robust that DARPA asked that other teams be allowed to use it.

“Some of the other teams’ software would just let them say, ‘move here,’” said Carff, who was primary operator of the IHMC robot. “With ours, we could put a virtual arm out in the world, and we can see where that virtual arm is going to go, we can preview the path it’s going to take, and we can say, ‘Yes, that’s not going to collide with anything, so go for it.’”

In keeping with IHMC’s core principles, the software ensures a high degree of collaboration between the human operators and the machine by “providing bi-directional information exchange,” according to an academic paper authored by the team members. The robot may suggest a move, but that suggestion can be verified by human operators.

The challenge has been a great learning experience for IHMC’s team and the entire field of robotics, team members said.

“All we can do is do the best research we can do,” Stephen said. “It’s not about beating the other teams as it is advancing the research and sharing that with the world.”

IHMC team members are expected to take some much-needed time off this summer before  turning to other robotics projects.

Differences Persist In Florida Budget Negotiations

June 8, 2015

A second day of negotiations between House and Senate lawmakers over a spending plan for the budget year that begins July 1 seemed to highlight longstanding divisions between the two chambers even as legislators tried to come to agreement.

The negotiations came during a special session called because lawmakers couldn’t finish a budget — their one annual, constitutionally-required duty — during the spring regular session. Legislators are trying to wrap up work by the scheduled end of the special session on June 20, or 10 days before the state must have a spending plan in place to avoid a government shutdown.

The joint House-Senate conference committee on health care, the issue most responsible for pushing the Legislature into overtime, didn’t meet on Sunday after two sessions on Saturday. Lawmakers have already agreed to how much to send to hospitals and other medical providers that care for large numbers of low-income patients, but other differences remain, including how to divvy up that money among the state’s hospitals.

Other negotiating panels met, but there were divisions. On environmental funding, the two chambers still disagree on whether to use bonds to fund projects like Everglades restoration.

“I would think that about the quickest way I could tell you the Senate position on it is, B-O-N-D is a four letter word,” Sen. Alan Hays, a Umatilla Republican who oversees the Senate’s environmental budget committee, said Sunday. “I’m not trying to be cute. But I’m not considering bonding.”

The House removed $33 million for new bonding — which would have generated more than $300 million — from its latest offer on the environmental budget. But Rep. Ben Albritton, the Wauchula Republican leading the House negotiators, cautioned against reading too much into the chamber’s new position.

“This is an olive branch,” Albritton told reporters. “Remember, the chairman (Hays) said, and I agree, that everything on this is open.”

The House argues that the state should take advantage of low borrowing costs while it can. “Money today is pretty cheap,” Albritton said during the meeting.

Last week, Senate President Andy Gardiner said the Senate was hesitant about bonding because of the failure of a water policy bill during the regular session. The Senate version of that bill included an oversight council to rate potential water projects, an idea opposed by the House.

“Without the oversight and some of the things that the Senate was very interested in, it made the bonding piece difficult,” said Gardiner, R-Orlando.

Any bonding could also run into a veto from Gov. Rick Scott, who has trumpeted the fact that his administration has driven down state debt since he took office.

Senators working on the economic development budget also raised questions about $10 million the House wants to spend on “space infrastructure facilities.” The money would go to improvements at Kennedy Space Center, according to Rep. Clay Ingram, R-Pensacola.

But Ingram, House chairman of the conference committee dealing with the issue, didn’t directly answer questions from his counterpart, Sen. Jack Latvala, about whether the improvements were connected to a specific effort by state officials to attract a space-related company.

“As I have told you earlier, $10 million is what you call real money…I don’t think the Senate will be comfortable with agreeing to that particular item until we have a little more information about it,” said Latvala, R-Clearwater.

Meanwhile, House and Senate lawmakers trying to hammer out an education budget struck on an area of disagreement that emerged Saturday, when the Senate looked to add several policy measures into a one-year budget-related bill.

The Senate proposal would broaden eligibility for personal learning scholarship accounts, which help parents of students with disabilities pay for educational services; put new limits on four-year degrees offered by the Florida College System; and require Florida school districts to teach students about the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

“Many of the new issues are not directly related to the budget and, to whatever extent we can, if they haven’t been vetted by a House policy committee, we’ve trying to avoid that process,” said Rep. Erik Fresen, R-Miami, who heads the House’s education budget panel, said Sunday.

Several of the committees are expected to meet again Monday. If the conference committees can’t finish their work by Tuesday, House Appropriations Chairman Richard Corcoran, R-Land O’ Lakes, and Senate Appropriations Chairman Tom Lee, R-Brandon, will begin negotiating directly.

by Brandon Larrabee, The News Service of Florida

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