Gov. Rick Scott Tours Tornado Damage In Century, Pensacola (With Photo Gallery)

February 25, 2016

After touring Tuesday night’s tornado damage in Pensacola, Gov. Rick Scott headed north to see the recovery efforts from last week’s EF-3 tornado in Century.

The governor walked through the hardest hit areas, stopping to talk with residents and recovery workers. He was accompanied by an entourage of officials, including Mayor Freddie McCall, Pensacola Mayor Ashton Hayward, Sheriff David Morgan, County Administrator Jack Brown, Commissioner Steven Barry, Century Council President Ben Boutwell and others.

“We have declared a state of emergency, and we are providing some emergency funds from the state. I know the county is doing their part….everybody is doing their part,” Scott told NorthEscambia.com.  The amount of damage from the Century area tornado does not meet the threshold for FEMA funding, but state housing dollars may become available.

Scott spent about 45 minutes walking several streets in Century. Several residents met Scott outside their damaged homes. Some seemed surprised to see the governor and welcomed him, while others questioned why it took over a week, and a second disaster in Pensacola, for him to visit. Along the way, he asked residents about their well-being, and if they had the basics like food, power and water.

He asked about the age of the houses, particularly on Front Street, where he was told the homes date back about a hundred years when they were built by the Alger-Sullivan Lumber Company. He stopped by the Century Pharmacy and met with Pharmacist Julie Booth, and made his away inside the Methodist church knocked off of its foundation by  the tornado.

“You just feel sorry for each of these individuals, and we are blessed that nobody died. We want to do what we can to help them get their lives back in order. But you just feel so sorry for them, Scott said.

For a photo gallery, click here.

Pictured above: Century Mayor Freddie McCall, Gov. Rick Scott and Escambia County Administrator Jack Brown look at tornado recovery efforts on Front Street in Century. NorthEscambia.com photo.



Cool, Dry Weather Continues

February 25, 2016

Here is your official NorthEscambia area forecast:
Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 61. West wind 5 to 15 mph.

Thursday Night: Clear, with a low around 36. North wind 5 to 10 mph.

Friday: Sunny, with a high near 56. North wind 5 to 10 mph.

Friday Night: Clear, with a low around 34. Northwest wind around 5 mph.

Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 61. North wind around 5 mph becoming west in the afternoon.

Saturday Night: Clear, with a low around 38. Southwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 67. Light and variable wind becoming south 5 to 10 mph in the morning.

Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 49. South wind around 5 mph.

Monday: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly sunny, with a high near 70.

Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 51.

Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 72.

Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 54.

Wednesday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 70.

Pensacola Tornado Was EF-3 (With Photo Gallery)

February 25, 2016

The tornado that struck Pensacola Tuesday night has been rated as an EF-3 with maximum winds of 155 mph over an eight mile path that was up 300 yards wide, according to the National Weather Service in Mobile. It was the second  EF-3 tornado in Escambia County in eight days, with a similar tornado hitting the Century area on February 15.

Only three other F-3 tornadoes have ever been recorded in Escambia County. Rated on the old F scale rather than EF, the F-3 tornadoes hit in 1956, 1967 and 1971.

For more photos, including aerial photos, click here.

For a photo gallery from the aftermath of Tuesday’s Pensacola EF-3 tornado, click here.

Photo courtesy: Escambia County, Escambia County Fire Rescue, City of Pensacola and Kristi Price for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Photo Blown Away During Century Tornado Found 50 Miles Away

February 25, 2016

A picture ripped from a home in Century during last week’s EF-3 tornado has been found over 50 miles away in southern Alabama. Brian Jones of McKenzie, AL, told Montgomery TV station WSFA that he found the picture in a wooded area. He posted it on social media, and the connection was made to Ashley Brown of Century. Brown, her cousin and their children rode out the tornado in a closet as most of the home was destroyed.

Jones said he plans to frame the photo and deliver it one day back to Century.

Pictured below: Ashely Brown’s home in Century, 50 miles from where a photo from the home was found in Alabama. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

House Gambling Bill Could Get Overhaul

February 25, 2016

House Finance and Tax Chairman Matt Gaetz is pushing changes that would match up a House gambling proposal with an even more-expansive Senate bill, but aligning the two packages may not be enough to keep the measure rolling in the Senate.

Gaetz said Wednesday morning he plans to introduce a sweeping amendment to the House proposal at his committee’s meeting next week.

The House’s plan currently complements an agreement, called a “compact,” with the Seminole Tribe, struck by tribal leaders and Gov. Rick Scott. Under the compact signed in December, the tribe would be allowed to add craps and roulette to its casino operations in exchange for $3 billion in payments to the state over seven years.

Scott’s agreement with the tribe would also open the door for slots at the Palm Beach Kennel Club and at a new facility in Miami-Dade County, items included in the House plan.

Gaetz’s proposal will mirror one, approved by the Senate Regulated Industries Committee last week, that would allow slot machines in at least five counties where voters have approved them, with more on the horizon. Along with Palm Beach, those counties are Brevard, Gadsden, Lee and Washington.

Like the Senate plan, Gaetz also intends to add language that would require the compact to recognize that fantasy sports — which face allegations of illegal gambling — are legal in Florida. The plan would also allow dog and horse tracks, as well as jai alai operators, to discontinue live races or matches while keeping more lucrative cardrooms or slots, a process known as decoupling.

“It’s time for both chambers to start moving toward one another,” Gaetz, R-Fort Walton Beach, said in an interview Wednesday.

But Senate leaders remained skeptical about the future of their chamber’s plan, with time running out before the March 11 scheduled end of the legislative session.

“I don’t know how we unwind it. I think it ends up sitting in committee,” Senate Majority Leader Bill Galvano, R-Bradenton, told The News Service of Florida on Wednesday. Galvano was instrumental in hashing out a deal with the Seminoles in 2010.

The changes folded into the Senate bill last week would require new negotiations with the Seminoles and could negatively affect the $3 billion revenue share pledged by the tribe. Federal law requires that tribes have “exclusivity” regarding some aspect of gambling in order to justify revenue-sharing agreements with states.

“Because so much of the oxygen is being sucked up by (discussions about) the budget, I think that makes it more difficult for the Senate and the House to work through a complicated gaming bill,” Senate Regulated Industries Chairman Rob Bradley, R-Fleming Island, said Wednesday. “It’s complicated as a stand-alone, but when you add into the fact that we still don’t have allocations and we still don’t have the dates for (budget) conference, I think that makes it a real challenge right now.”

Expanding the number of facilities that could have slots would impact the tribe’s “exclusivity” over the games, currently limited to pari-mutuels in Broward and Miami-Dade counties in addition to the Seminoles’ operations.

The tribe is suing the state in federal court, alleging that gambling regulators have approved pari-mutuel activities that violate a 2010 compact giving the tribe exclusive rights to operate blackjack at most of its casinos. The portion of the compact dealing with the card games expired last summer, but the tribe continues to operate the games.

While the Senate plan would allow the tribe to have exclusive rights to operate craps and roulette, it remains unclear how much the Seminoles would be willing to pay the state if slots are added at more pari-mutuels.

“I’m not interested in any erosion of the tribe’s revenue given to the state,” Gaetz said, adding that the tribe “badly needs” the compact.

“They’re building a national and global brand. They’re trying to demonstrate to other states around the country that they’re good corporate citizens and good partners. I believe that litigation and conflict with the state of Florida is not a good thing for the tribe,” he said.

Apart from the senators’ gloomy prospects for the gambling package, Gaetz said Wednesday he didn’t know yet whether he had the support to move it to the House floor for a full vote.

“I don’t even have a product, much less a vote count,” he said.

by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida

CSX Crossing Work In North Escambia Concludes

February 25, 2016

Work is now complete on over a dozen North Escambia railroad crossings, and they are all back open.

CSX closed the  North Escambia  crossings as part of its network-wide crossing maintenance program beginning last week. CSX engineering crews installed new rail ties, resurfaced crossings and repaved them with asphalt.

The crossings that were updated included:

  • Highway 4
  • Cottage Street
  • McCurdy Road
  • Hecker Road
  • Front Street
  • East Pond Street
  • Jefferson Avenue
  • Salters Lake Road
  • Bluff Springs Road
  • Courtney Road
  • Mystic Springs Road
  • East Bogia Road
  • Cotton Lake Road

Pictured top: Repairs were made to the Hecker Road crossing in Century late last month. Pictured below: East Highway 4’s railroad crossing was also included in the upgrades. NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.

Northview Celebrates National FFA Week With Breakfast

February 25, 2016

FFA members at Northview High School are celebrating National FFA Week with a variety of events. Wednesday, the FFA officers and members prepared a homestyle breakfast for teachers, staff and invited guests that support the FFA program. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

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Driver Plows Into Building

February 25, 2016

An elderly Santa Rosa County resident was charged with careless driving after colliding with a building on McLemore Drive.

The Florida Highway Patrol said 84-year old Emile H. Luquet of Milton drove a 2010 Subaru Outback into the TestAmerica building. Luquet told the FHP the accelerator became stuck. Luquet was not injured, and there were no injuries reported in the building.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Scott Signs ‘Backyard Gun Range’, Eight Other Bills

February 25, 2016

Surrounded by a group of police chiefs, Gov. Rick Scott signed into law a measure dubbed the “backyard range” bill, intended to restrict the recreational discharge of a firearm in certain residential areas.

The proposal was one of nine that Scott signed into law Wednesday.

The backyard range measure (SB 130) prohibits the recreational discharge of a firearm outdoors, including for target shooting or celebratory shooting, in primarily residential areas with a density of one or more dwelling units per acre. A violation would be a first-degree misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine.

The bill, which goes into effect immediately, was backed by the Florida Police Chiefs Association, the National Rifle Association and the Unified Sportsmen of Florida.

St. Augustine Beach Police Chief Robert Hardwick said the legislation will ensure “residential areas are better protected from people using firearms irresponsibly and unlawfully.”

A Senate staff analysis of the bill pointed to reports about people constructing gun ranges in their backyards, with neighbors being concerned for safety. Law enforcement officials complained that they were hamstrung because their lawyers found the state statute barring “recklessly or negligently” discharging a firearm to be “subjective and vague.”

Scott’s signature Wednesday comes nearly five years after the governor signed into law a measure that voided all local firearms restrictions.

The “backyard range” issue received heightened attention in June 2014 when the Comedy Channel’s “Colbert Report” did a satirical piece on a Big Pine Key resident who legally set up a makeshift side-yard shooting range using a state law, created in 1987, regarding shooting on private property.

Scott also signed a measure (SB 228) Wednesday that would remove aggravated assault from a list of offenses that lead to people being sentenced under the 10-20-Life mandatory-minimum sentencing law. Scott said he signed the bill because it was supported by the law enforcement community and “made sense.”

A third bill (SB 158) signed Wednesday would allow people with lifetime fishing or hunting licenses, or boater-safety identification cards, to have a symbol added to their driver licenses displaying that lifetime status. The addition of the symbol, when a driver’s license is issued or renewed, would come with a $1 fee.

Both of those measures go into effect on July 1.

Other bills signed Wednesday (SB 182) would extend several public-records exemptions involving financial “trade secret” information, while a related proposal (SB 180) would make theft of trade-secret financial information a third-degree felony. Those laws go into effect on Oct. 1.

Four other measures signed by Scott Wednesday (SB 1030, SB 1032, SB 1038 and SB 1040) involve technical changes to state statutes.

by Jim Turner, The News Service of Florida

Daelin Isaiah Joe Mathis

February 25, 2016

Daelin Isaiah Joe Mathis was born on February 15, 2016, but the Lord was looking for a perfect angel, so the Lord called him home on February 17, 2016.

Left to cherish his memory are his parents, Trista Mickeal Kent and Brandon Joshua Mathis; brother, Draven Richard David Bell and twin brother, Daniel Tyler Noah Mathis; grandparents, Kara Jo Crist, Christine Holloway, Chiquita Mathis, and William Henderson; aunt, Ashley Nicole Norman; uncles, Roger Mulnix and Eli; and various other aunts, uncles, cousins, great-grandparents, and other relatives.

He is preceded in death by his grandpa, Richard Allen Crist Jr.; great-grandpa, Richard Allen Crist Sr. “Big D” and grandpa, Noah Mathis Jr.

A visitation will be held on Saturday, February 27, 2016, from 1 p.m. until 2 p.m. at Jay Funeral Home. Funeral services will begin at 2 p.m. with Bro. Glenn officiating services.

Burial will follow at Ebenezer Assembly of God Church Cemetery.

Active pallbearers will be Jonathon Hamilton and Travis Odom.

Honorary pallbearers will be William Henderson and Roger Mulnix.

The family would like to thank everyone for their help, concerns, and prayers during this difficult time. We really appreciate everything.

Flowers and donations are being accepted.

Jay Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

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