Patchy Fog Overnight

November 4, 2015

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

Tonight: Patchy fog after midnight. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. Calm wind becoming east around 5 mph.

Thursday: Patchy fog before 8am. Otherwise, partly sunny, with a high near 84. East wind 5 to 10 mph becoming south in the afternoon.

Thursday Night: Patchy fog after midnight. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a low around 69. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.

Friday: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 3pm. Patchy fog before 9am. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 84. Calm wind becoming south around 5 mph in the morning.

Friday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.

Saturday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 81. Calm wind becoming northeast around 5 mph in the afternoon.

Saturday Night: A 40 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 58. North wind 5 to 10 mph.

Sunday: A 30 percent chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a high near 69. Northeast wind around 10 mph.

Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 55. Northeast wind 5 to 10 mph.

Monday: Partly sunny, with a high near 69.

Monday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 54.

Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 70.

Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 57.

Veterans Day: Mostly sunny, with a high near 75.

Northview Teacher Barry Flies With The Blue Angels

November 4, 2015

Northview High School teacher Anna Barry flew with the Blue Angels Tuesday from NAS Pensacola.

“I knew it was going to be a once in a lifetime experience, but it exceeded my highest expectations,” Barry said shortly after the flight. “I don’t even have the right words to describe it…it was really awesome.”

The flight included many of the demonstration maneuvers that Blue Angels fans know from airshows, including flying upside down and barrel rolls.

“I was just surreal to be up there part of the same tricks that you see from the ground,” she said.

The history teacher was especially  proud of the fact that she made it through the entire flight without passing out — even while pulling over 6 G’s — and that she did not get sick.

Barry was chosen for the flight as a local “key influencer” as the current Escambia County Teacher of the Year. And she said she can’t wait to get back to Northview to share her experience with her students and the NJROTC program at the school.

“I want to share with the kids that they should always aim high,” she said. “There are no excuses, most anything is possible if you step our of your comfort zone.”

Numerous friends and family members were back on the ground watching Barry’s flight, including her grandfather, John Calvin Davis, Sr.  “He was especially proud. He was in the Navy,” she said,  “training for a amphibious assault on Toyko.”

Also flying with the Blue Angels Tuesday were local Boy Scouts of America district executive Suzie West and NewsRadio 1620’s Andrew McKay. The Blue Angels will close the 2015 season at their annual Homecoming Air Show aboard
Naval Air Station Pensacola on Friday and Saturday.

Photos by U.S. Navy, Regina Barry and others for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Portion Of Pine Forest Closed Through Thursday

November 4, 2015

A portion of Pine Forest Road in Walnut Hill is scheduled to be closed through tomorrow afternoon.

Pine Forest set to be closed through 4:30 p.m. Thursday at the railroad tracks so that the railroad crossing can be replaced.

Gulf Power Customers To See Rate Decrease Next Year

November 4, 2015

Gulf Power customers will see a decrease in their monthly utility bill beginning in January.

The Florida Public Service Commission has approved Gulf Power’s request for the rate reduction. Starting January 2016, Gulf Power customers will see a 2.7 percent decrease in their electricity bills.

The average residential bill for 1,000-kilowatt hours of electricity will drop $3.71 to $135.58. This decrease is due mostly to continued lower prices in natural gas and coal used to generate electricity.

“We’ve worked very hard to manage our fuel mix to provide affordable, reliable electric service for our customers,” said Jeff Rogers, Gulf Power manager of external communications. “In the end it means lower electricity bills and that’s great news for Gulf Power customers.”

Each January the FPSC adjusts Gulf Power’s prices to reflect cost changes in fuel, environmental compliance and energy conservation programs.

Tate Lady Aggies Team Raises Over $12K In Making Strides Walk

November 4, 2015

In last Saturday’s Making Strides Against Breast Cancer Walk in Pensacola, the Tate High School Lady Aggies Softball team raised over $12,500, placing No. 2 among teams. Submitted photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Judicial Term Limits Get Backing In House

November 4, 2015

Florida Supreme Court justices and appeals-court judges would be limited to two full terms in office under a proposed constitutional amendment approved Tuesday by a House subcommittee.

The proposal (HJR 197), which would limit most justices and judges to less than 15 years in office, passed the House Civil Justice Subcommittee on an 8-5 vote. Rep. George Moraitis, R-Fort Lauderdale, joined the panel’s four Democrats in voting against the measure.

Under the proposal, members of the Supreme Court and District Courts of Appeal would be limited to two full six-year terms, though tenures would likely be longer than that because jurists are appointed to partial terms before facing voters in retention elections. No current member of the bench would be affected, and trial-court judges would not face term limits.

The proposal comes after years of rising anger in the Legislature at members of the Supreme Court. With its more-liberal majority, the state’s highest court has emerged as the only major hurdle in Tallahassee to Republicans’ conservative agenda.

Some Republicans unsuccessfully attempted to defeat three members of the court majority — R. Fred Lewis, Barbara Pariente and Peggy Quince — in the 2012 elections. Had the trio been limited to two full terms, all three would have been barred from running that year.

But Rep. John Wood, a Winter Haven Republican sponsoring the term-limits proposal, said unhappiness with the judges has nothing to do with his measure. Wood this summer called for the impeachment of some of the Supreme Court justices over a redistricting decision striking down the state’s congressional map.

Instead, Wood said, the proposal would allow the state to get a diversity of legal thought on the appellate courts and might encourage those who serve in judicial offices to view their positions differently.

“The approach should be, it is public service. It’s not a career,” Wood told the subcommittee.

Opponents and others raised questions about whether the measure could remove judges who have built up institutional knowledge about the state’s laws and whether it might discourage younger lawyers from pursuing judgeships.

Warren Husband, who appeared on behalf of The Florida Bar, said that anyone becoming has a judge has to “essentially close up your practice, say goodbye to your clients and probably take a pay cut in order to serve as a judge.”

“So going into the proposition, you can’t really reasonably expect to serve as a judge for a few years, come out and pick up your practice where you left off,” Husband said. “Your firm has moved on, your clients have moved on and you’re essentially starting over again.”

The Bar hasn’t formally taken a position yet on the proposed amendment.

Criticism of the proposal crossed ideological lines. Moraitis said he shares some lawmakers’ concerns about judicial overreach.

“That is frustrating to me personally,” he said. “That said, I do feel like an independent judiciary is an important part of our constitutional system and I do feel like the justices’ ability to hold these jobs until they retire is important.”

Speaking to reporters afterward, Wood brushed off concerns about a loss of institutional knowledge.

“There’s extreme value to institutional knowledge. And you know where that institutional knowledge is? Right on that machine that you have there in your hand,” he said, pointing to a reporter’s smart phone. “There is more institutional knowledge in that machine than all the people combined on all of the appellate courts of this state. Knowledge is technology and we have the knowledge. We know what’s been said. We know how to analyze it. We have a lot of people that can do it.”

The proposed constitutional amendment has two more stops before it can go to the full House. It would need to be approved by 60 percent of the lawmakers in both chambers of the Legislature and the same share of voters in the 2016 elections to be added to the Florida Constitution.

by Brandon Larrabee, The News Service of Florida

Lawmakers Want To Provide Aid To Dozier Families

November 4, 2015

Two Democratic lawmakers filed bills Tuesday that would direct the Florida Department of State to preserve historical resources from the shuttered Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys and also to provide money to help families reinter bodies of children found at the Marianna site.

The bills (SB 708 and HB 533), filed by Senate Minority Leader Arthenia Joyner, D-Tampa, and Rep. Ed Narain, D-Tampa, come after extensive excavation work by University of South Florida researchers at the former reform school. The work stemmed from allegations that children were abused and died at the school, which operated for decades.

The bills differ somewhat, but both would put the Department of State in charge of preserving such things as records and artifacts from the site and would direct the department to continue research about what took place at the school. Joyner’s bill would allow reimbursements of up to $7,500 per family to help cover costs such as reinterring bodies exhumed from the site. Narain’s bill would allow payments of $5,000.

Both call for setting aside $1.5 million in the 2016-2017 state budget to carry out the proposed bills.

Gov. Rick Scott and the state Cabinet began discussions in late September about the future of the school site but did not make any decisions.

by The News Service of Florida

Pictured top: A trench dug in the search for human remains at the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys in Marianna. NorthEscambia.com file photo.

Glen Shannon Taylor

November 4, 2015

Glen Shannon Taylor, 50 of Atmore, passed away Sunday, November 2, 2015, in Walnut Hill. He was a mechanic with Offshore Oil Industry. He was born in Atmore on February 23, 1965, to Albert Austin and Patricia McBride Taylor.

He is preceded in death by his father, Albert Austin Taylor.

Survivors include his mother and step-father, Patricia Taylor (Feldman) Frymire of Atmore; two sons, Anthony Austin Taylor of Pensacola and Nolan Cole Taylor of Indianapolis, ID; two daughters, Lachlan Taylor of Bay Minette and Kelsey Taylor of Flomaton; one sister, Alissa Taylor of Redondo Beach, CA; seven grandchildren, Brandon, Aaron, Jacob, Jaxin, Easton, Kiley and Callen.

Services will be held Thursday, November 5, 2015, at 12 p.m. at the Johnson-Quimby Funeral Home chapel with Bro. Earl Harrison officiating.

Interment will follow in McCullough Cemetery.

Active pallbearers will be Feldman Frymire, Jason Taylor, Anthony Taylor, Nolan Taylor, Will Taylor and Sammy Lee.

Family will receive friends on Thursday, November 5, 2015, at Johnson-Quimby Funeral Home from 11 a.m. until service time.

In lieu of flowers donations can be made to the family.

Johnson-Quimby Funeral Home, Inc., is in charge of all arrangements.

Two Charged With Rue Max Murder

November 3, 2015

Two people have been arrested for a murder that occurred in the 600 block of Rue Max Street on October 26.

Javonte Kahlil Marsh and Dalton KyleJacob Wood, both 19, have been charged with vehicleburglary and murder not premeditated during the commission of a felony.
At approximately 2:50 a.m. on October 26,, the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office responded to the 600 block of Rue Max Street in reference to a shots fired disturbance. When deputies arrived on scene they located the victim, 28-year-old Alvin Dion Anderson, deceased from gunshot wounds. During the preliminary investigation, it was discovered that the victim confronted two suspicious males who were outside at an adjacent residence.
The victim got into a verbal altercation with the two males at which time the victim was shot. The two males were seen fleeing the scene. A witness described the men, a white male and a black male, as “young looking” with short hair.

Marsh and Wood are both being held in the Escambia County Jail without bond.

Driver Identified In Fatal Highway 97 Crash

November 3, 2015

The Florida Highway Patrol has identified the driver killed in a single vehicle crash early Monday morning in Walnut Hill.

The accident was discovered about 5:40 a.m. on Highway 97 just north of Tungoil Road. According to the FHP, 50-year old Glen Shannon Taylor of Atmore was traveling north on Highway 97 in a 2005 Lexus ES330 when he lost control, ran off the roadway and overturned multiple times. Taylor, who was ejected, was pronounced deceased at the scene. There were no passengers in the vehicle.

The wreck had apparently happened some period of time before it was discovered; a time estimate was not immediately known.

The accident is still under investigation by the Florida Highway Patrol.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.



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