Motorcycle Hits Tate High School Band Bus, Flees Scene

October 25, 2015

The Florida Highway Patrol is still searching for a motorcyclist that slammed into a school bus loaded with Tate High band members early Saturday morning.

Members of the Tate High Showband of the South were on several buses returning from an away football game. At Highway 87 and High School Boulevard in Navarre, the driver of a 2006 Yamaha motorcycle attempted a U-turn and struck the rear of the bus driven by Jackie Carnley of Milton.

After the collision, the driver of the motorcycle fled the scene on foot. The passenger on the motorcycle, 29-year old Donna G. Williams of Navarre, was transported to Fort Walton Beach Medical Center with minor injures.

There were 51 total passengers — 43 minors and eight adults — on the school bus. None of of them were injured.

The accident remains under investigation by the FHP.

FDOT: Weekly Traffic Alerts

October 25, 2015

Drivers will encounter traffic disruptions on the following state roads in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties as crews perform construction and maintenance activities.

Nine Mile Road from west of I-10 to Heritage Oaks Drive in Escambia County – Eastbound lane closures from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. beginning Sunday, Oct. 25 through Friday Oct. 30 as crews perform construction activities.

S.R. 727 (Fairfield Drive) between Mobile Highway (S.R. 10A) and N. Palafox (S.R. 95/U.S. 29) in Escambia County – Intermittent lane closures from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. Monday, Oct. 26 through Friday, Oct. 30 as crews perform striping operations.

I-110 Bridge Painting – Drivers may encounter intermittent daytime restrictions on city streets under I-110 between Maxwell and Garden Streets as crews clean the bridges.  The $2.6 million rehabilitation project is anticipated to be complete summer 2016.

I-10 Six Lane, Santa Rosa County – I-10 east and westbound between the Escambia Bay Bridge and State Road (S.R.) 281 (Avalon Boulevard) in Santa Rosa County.  Alternating lane closures Sunday, Oct. 25 through Thursday, Oct. 29. Lane closures will be in effect from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. as crews place temporary asphalt, concrete barrier wall and striping. Drivers will also encounter alternating lane closures on S.R. 281 (Avalon Boulevard) near the I-10 interchange as crews pace barrier wall and remove concrete.

U.S. 98 Resurfacing, Santa Rosa County – U.S. 98 between Live Oaks Village shopping center and the Gulf Breeze Zoo in Santa Rosa County. Alternating lane closures from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. Friday, Oct. 23, through Thursday, Oct. 29.  Crews will be placing the final layer of asphalt on the roadway and completing work list items.

Drivers are reminded to use caution, especially at night, when traveling through a work zone.  All planned construction activities are weather dependent and may be re-scheduled in the event of inclement weather.

Photo Gallery: Hundreds Attend Williams Station Day

October 25, 2015

Hundreds attended the annual Williams Station Day in Atmore Saturday.

Williams Station Day takes its name from Atmore’s early history when in 1866 the community was a supply stop along the Mobile and Great Northern railroad. Festival-goers were entertained by a wide variety of musical acts, and a wide variety of  arts and crafts were also available. An opening ceremony that featured a pink balloon release to recognize Breast Cancer Awareness month in October.

For a photo gallery, click here.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.


Flash Flood Watch In Effect

October 25, 2015

There is a flash flood watch in effect through Monday. Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:


Tonight: Showers and possibly a thunderstorm. Low around 69. East wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%.

Monday: Showers and possibly a thunderstorm. Some of the storms could produce heavy rainfall. High near 73. East wind around 15 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%.

Monday Night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Some of the storms could produce heavy rainfall. Cloudy, with a low around 66. East wind 10 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%.

Tuesday: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 78. South wind around 10 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph.

Tuesday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 64. South wind 5 to 10 mph.

Wednesday: A 20 percent chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a high near 78. West wind around 5 mph.

Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 59. West wind around 5 mph becoming calm after midnight.

Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 78. Calm wind becoming west around 5 mph in the afternoon.

Thursday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 53.

Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 75.

Friday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 55.

Saturday: A 20 percent chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a high near 75.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: Ink And Mumbo Jumbo

October 25, 2015

Nobody thought the Legislature’s latest attempt at crafting new Senate districts was going to be easy.

But this week’s intraparty Republican fighting at the opening of a special session — in a year that sadly might best be characterized as the “Session That Never Ended” — foreshadowed what could be another grim two weeks of drawing maps, chased by an equally foreboding regular session in a few months.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgThe contentiousness wasn’t restricted to the Legislature’s domain, however, even if another painful controversy did wind up inside the Capitol.

Florida A&M University President Elmira Mangum narrowly survived an attempted ouster that sharply divided alumni and students and wound up with the exit instead of the chairman of the college’s board of trustees.

Meanwhile, Capitol denizens might want to think again if they are considering a pool on the outcome of what could turn into another doomed redistricting attempt.

Senate President Andy Gardiner put the daily fantasy sports industry on notice this week that he’s definitely not “all in” on the online activity that’s swept the nation.

YEP. REDISTRICTING

The Senate Reapportionment Committee on Friday voted along party lines to approve a Senate map proposed by Chairman Bill Galvano, R-Bradenton. But there was grumbling from even some Republicans that the map might be flawed, most notably from Senate budget chief Tom Lee, a former Senate president. Before voting for the proposal, Lee called his chamber’s six proposals “defiant” and accused GOP leaders of being “unnecessarily dug in” on plans that would ultimately fail to garner support from the Florida Supreme Court.

Friday’s vote capped off a week of acrimony over the Senate plans.

Plunging into the debate Monday, the heretofore sharply divided House and Senate quickly hit on an area of disagreement about whether all 40 Senate seats will be up for re-election next year.

The split on the opening day of the session was an ominous sign about the three-week gathering aimed at producing a map that follows the voter-approved “Fair Districts” redistricting standards.

The new districts are needed after lawmakers signed a consent agreement with voting-rights organizations that conceded the current Senate map, drawn in 2012, would likely be found unconstitutional under the anti-gerrymandering amendments.

The concession followed court challenges to legislative and congressional maps that showed Republican political consultants used straw men to funnel maps into the redistricting process following the once-a-decade U.S. Census.

Late Wednesday, Galvano released his proposed draft of the map, as Republican discontent with a plan for whether and when members would have to run for re-election continued to brew.

The complicated dance during a special redistricting session highlighted the delicacy of the issue among lawmakers most affected by the process. It also underscored fissures within the GOP majority over a lingering battle for the Senate presidency following the 2016 elections, which continued to play out before the reapportionment committee gave approval to the plan Friday.

Meanwhile, senators clashed over efforts to come up with a random way of numbering districts without intending to favor incumbents. Because odd-numbered districts vote in presidential years, where larger turnout favors Democrats, and even-numbered districts vote in midterms with smaller and more conservative electorates, the number of a district can affect how safe a seat is for a particular party.

The Senate used a process Thursday overseen by the state auditor general to randomly select which seats would receive even numbers and which ones would get odd numbers. But Democrats complained during the unusual gathering — which was not formally a committee meeting — that it was too early to number the districts because it could provide lawmakers with an idea of when they would have to run.

The numbers would also decide which senators would be able to hold office for four years and who would have to run again in two years if every member of the chamber has to run for re-election in 2016 — though that hasn’t been decided.

Members of the GOP caucus, stung by repeated legal losses in redistricting cases over more than three years, said Wednesday that the Senate should consider asking the Florida Supreme Court or the Leon County judge currently overseeing the settlement what to do about the numbers.

“I just don’t find any consistency in this,” Lee said. “I think I’ve lost confidence.”

FAMU RATTLED

In a dramatic three-hour meeting Thursday, members of Florida A&M’s Board of Trustees made failed attempts to fire President Elmira Mangum and sparked students to march to Gov. Rick Scott’s office in support of the embattled president.

Mangum narrowly survived two votes that could have led to her ouster, the latest episode in a series of public conflicts between the president and several trustees.

Discussion during the meeting centered on payments for renovations to the president’s residence and four employee bonuses, which trustees Chairman Rufus Montgomery described as “irregularities and improprieties” that had not been approved by the board.

“It’s a violation of state law,” said Montgomery, who wound up resigning Friday.

Within hours of Thursday’s votes, FAMU students marched to the Capitol, demanding justice for Mangum. About 150 congregated outside the governor’s office, where their representatives met with members of Scott’s staff.

“It was an act of malfeasance on the part of the FAMU Board of Trustees,” said student body Vice President Justin Bruno, a junior from Orlando. “There needs to be some grounds for their insinuations. …They need to have grounds. They need to have evidence.”

SENATE PRESIDENT NO FAN OF FANTASY SPORTS

Gardiner, R-Orlando, said Wednesday he is exploring what the state can do to shut down daily fantasy sports, even as federal prosecutors are probing the online industry that has drawn accusations of illegal gambling.

Gardiner has asked his lawyers to look into the games, in which players pay entry fees to draft “teams” that compete against each other for cash prizes based on the actual performance of players.

The fast-growing daily fantasy sports industry is the focus of probes by prosecutors in New York and Tampa, where the U.S. Attorney’s Office recently subpoenaed the Florida-based Fantasy Sports Trade Association.

People in the industry contend that fantasy sports is not gambling because it involves games of skill, not chance, which are outlawed under most state gambling laws.

But gambling regulators in Nevada last week ordered companies like FanDuel and DraftKings to stop operating in the state after determining that online players’ activity “involves wagering on the collective performance of individuals participating in sporting events.” The decision prompted several online fantasy sports businesses to shut down operations in the state.

“I have asked staff to kind of start the process of researching as much as we possibly can,” Gardiner, R-Orlando, told The News Service of Florida on Wednesday. “I would remind you we ran the Internet cafes out of the state of Florida because they were outlawed and they were bad. You have the Nevada Gaming Commission saying that FanDuel and DraftKings are gaming and gambling. So we have an obligation, if we’re going to be consistent, that we need to look at them, and, if it is gaming, then we need to react to it.”

STORY OF THE WEEK: A Senate committee advanced a map of the chamber’s districts, but not without plenty of bipartisan angst.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “But all I get is squid ink when I talk to these people — a bunch of mumbo jumbo that, ‘well, this is my theory.’ Well, show me in some court precedent. Show me in some legal proceeding. Stop telling me what you want the answer to be and tell me what you think it is based upon the law. And I get nothing.” — Sen. Tom Lee, R-Brandon, expressing frustration as lawmakers tried to redraw Senate districts.

by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida

Panel Calls For More Online Access To Justice System

October 25, 2015

Trying to make legal services more accessible in Florida, recommendations released recently call for a “robust” website outlining local, state and national legal resources that low- and moderate-income residents could access at home or on an increased number of public computers.

The Florida Commission on Access to Civil Justice, created by Supreme Court Chief Justice Jorge Labarga, also called in an interim report for additional people providing pro bono services and to draw leftover money from class-action lawsuits to help fund legal-aid efforts.

Labarga, in a letter to the other justices that was included with the report, called the recommendations a “solid foundation” to expand access to civil justice.

“I am confident the commission is on the right path to create meaningful access to civil justice for all Floridians,” Labarga wrote.

The report notes there is “anecdotal evidence” that a growing number of Floridians are heading to court without legal representation, mostly involving family-court cases.

“The commission was also informed that mortgage foreclosure cases and landlord-tenant cases more frequently involve self-represented litigants,” the report said. “In addition, it is reported that the courts are seeing more cases in which at the beginning of the case one or both parties are represented, but that one or both of the parties do not retain their legal representation through final disposition of the case.”

The committee, created in November 2014 to make civil-justice services more accessible to needy Floridians, will meet again Feb. 12 in Tallahassee.

Craig Waters, a spokesman for the Supreme Court, said no action is expected to be taken on the recommendations until the committee’s final report is submitted. The final report is due June 30.

The interim report notes that local legal-aid agencies, long a safety net for many low-income residents, serve about 20 percent of the needs of indigent civil litigants.

“This does not even take into account the many working-class Floridians who earn too much to qualify for legal aid, but not enough to afford to hire an attorney,” the report said. “This is the Florida civil justice gap.”

Among the recommendations is the creation of an “easy-to-use” Florida Civil Legal Resources Access Website, integrating existing systems from the courts, pro bono community and legal services programs.

To make the site more accessible, the committee recommended the continued development of the Statewide Gateway Portal, which would make more public computers available at libraries, shopping malls or courthouses as a type of legal “triage” for those needing help with divorces, foreclosures or child support.

The committee also recommended that a rule be revised so that more individuals, such as judges who have retired to Florida, could provide pro bono services.

To help fund legal aid, the commission proposed using residual money that remains after class-action lawsuits.

“Eighteen states have court rules or statutes providing for legal aid organizations to receive class action residuals,” the report said.

by Jim Turner, The News Service of Florida

Barbara Howell Dickerson

October 25, 2015

Mrs. Barbara Howell Dickerson, 83, passed away on Saturday, October 24, 2015, in Mobile.

Mrs. Dickerson was a native of Brewton and a resident of Atmore for the past 58 years. Mrs. Dickerson was retired FHA with 30 years with Escambia County Florida. She was an avid Auburn fan and Atlanta Braves fan. She was a loving mother, grandmother and great-grandmother. She was a member of the First Baptist Church of Atmore. She is preceded in death by her parents, W.C. “Red” and Lucille Howell and brother, W.C. “Billy” Howell, Jr.

She is survived by one daughter and son-in-law, Dawn and Ted Malone of Atmore; two grandchildren, Molly Malone (Jonathan “Red”) Cowles of Atlanta, GA and Ryan (Joy) Malone of Atmore; one great-grandchild, Camden Cowles; one nephew, Donald Howell of Mountain Brook, AL; one niece, Jennifer Howell Gibney of Mobile and special family member, Joan Malone of Bay Minette.

Funeral services will be Wednesday, October 28, 2015, at 10 a.m. at the Petty-Eastside Chapel Funeral Home with Rev. Kelly Brown and Rev. Arnold Hendrix officiating.

Burial will follow at the Union Cemetery in Brewton.

Visitation will be Tuesday, October 27, 2015, from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. at the Petty-Eastside Chapel Funeral Home.

Pallbearers will be Gerald Malone, Ryan Malone, Donald Howell, Jonathan Cowles, Earl Weaver and Tab Jernigan.

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

Mary Alice Jernigan Darby

October 25, 2015

Mary Alice Jernigan Darby, age 80 of Pensacola, went home to be with her Lord and Savior on Monday, October 26, 2015. Mary was born in Brewton on May 22, 1935, to the late Mason and Rhogene Jernigan. She graduated from W. S. Neal High School in 1953, where she met J.C. Darby and they became high school sweethearts. They were married for 58 years before his passing in 2011. She was a faithful member of Community of Christ Church and an avid fishing and camping enthusiast. Most of all she will be remembered for her devotion to her family.

She is survived by her son, Robert M. (Debbie) Darby of Hinesville, GA; daughter, Robin Darby (Greg) Kimmel of Ft. Walton Beach; grandchildren, Melissa Darby (Richard) Houston of Nashville,  Jason Darby of Hinesville, GA, Kristyn Kimmel of Freeport, FL, and Darbi Kimmel (Christopher) Evett of Ft. Walton Beach; great-granddaughter, Harper Houston; three sisters, Aline (Nelson) Wasserman, Joan (Jack) White and Evelyn (Wayne) Fuqua.

Funeral services will be held at 10:30AM on Thursday, October 29, 2015, at Faith Chapel Funeral Home North with Pastor Jim Sherrard and Pastor Les Kelley officiating.

Burial will follow in Jordan Cemetery.

The family will receive friends at 9:30 a.m. prior to services.

Pallbearers will be Jason Darby, Jason Fuqua, Chad Fuqua, Josh Fuqua, Julius Darby, Richard Houston, and Chris Evett.

Faith Chapel Funeral Home North is in charge of arrangements.

FDOT State Line Landscaping Project Complete On Highway 97

October 24, 2015

Drivers entering Florida on Highway 97 in Davisville now have a little bit better view.

Work was recently completed on a a gateway landscaping project on Highway 97 at the Alabama/Florida state line. The $163,900 project includes state line landscaping on both Highway 97 and on Highway 90 by contractor Pine Grove Nursery and Landscaping. The landscaping is funded by the Florida Department of Transportation.

Pictured: New landscaping in place along Highway 97 at the state line in Davisville. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Escambia Official Named New City Administrator

October 24, 2015

An Escambia County official has been named the assistant city administrator for the City of Pensacola.

Mayor Ashton Hayward announced that Keith Wilkins had accepted his employment offer.

Wilkins is currently the Escambia County Director of Natural Resources Management and most recently was the Director of the Community and Environment Department where he worked to revitalize six Community Redevelopment Districts and the Enterprise Zone in Escambia County.  He also directed environmental recovery from the BP Oil Spill securing over $40M in economic and environmental restoration funds for Escambia County, the City of Pensacola and the greater Pensacola/Perdido Bay area.

Wilkins is expected to start his new job at the end of November.

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