Yard Sale Today At First Baptist Church Of Cantonment

June 25, 2016

The First Baptist Church of Cantonment is holding a church-wide  yard sale today from 8 a.m. until 1 p.m.  The church is located at 118 Morris Avenue in Cantonment. All proceeds will go toward a children’s building. Submitted photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Smokies Top Wahoos 4-1

June 25, 2016

After the Pensacola Blue Wahoos kicked off the second half of the season with a win, game two of the second half ended in a hard-fought 4-1 loss to the Tennessee Smokies.

In a game that saw Pensacola and Tennessee scatter eight and nine hits, respectively, the Smokies found ways to turn those hits into runs.

The Blue Wahoos struck first in the top half of the first inning when Sebastian Elizalde drove in Zach Vincej on an RBI single.

Tennessee took a 2-1 lead with two outs in the bottom half of the inning, as Billy McKinney singled to score Ian Happ followed by an RBI single by Ben Carhart to drive in Victor Caratini. From that point on, the Smokies would not relinquish that lead.

The Smokies lead increased to 3-1 with a sac fly by Chesny Young to score Jacob Hannemann in the bottom of the seventh. In the eighth, Kelly Dugan homered to left center to provide Tennessee with a 4-1 lead.

Sal Romano (1-8) took the loss in his start for the Wahoos, allowing seven hits and a pair of earned runs in his four innings of work. Romano also struck out three batters and walked one in the outing before being relieved by Evan Mitchell, who tossed a pair of hitless innings. Mitchell walked and struck out a batter in his two innings of work.

Kyle McMyne finished out the contest for the Wahoos, allowing two earned runs on two hits—one of them a home run—in his two innings of work, while striking out a pair of batters.

Jen-Ho Tseng (3-3) garnered the start for the Smokies, allowing the lone run on six hits in six innings of work and earning his third win of the year for Tennessee. He struck out four batters while walking three. R.J. Alvarez and Josh Conway both pitched an inning each in shutout relief. Jose Rosario closed out the contest with a shutout inning, allowing just one hit and striking out a pair while earning his second save of the season.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: To Run Or Not To Run, And Bears

June 25, 2016

There might not have been much cursing or broken clubs, but there was one way in which Florida politics this week resembled a golf game: Everyone seemed to want a mulligan.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgU.S. Sen. Marco Rubio asked for a do-over on his pledge not to run for re-election, three months after Republican voters rejected his presidential bid that prompted the guarantee in the first place. It was a decision that rippled through a campaign season that was beginning in earnest, and candidates at several levels were left scrambling to manage the fallout before Friday’s qualifying deadline.

Meanwhile, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission took a pass on reprising its controversial decision last year to authorize a bear hunt — meaning the state’s ursine community is safe for at least another year. But there was already talk of letting hunters have at the animals again in 2017.

One thing that didn’t seem likely to change: the politics of gun control following the deadliest shooting spree in American history. Democrats at the state and federal level continued to press for new restrictions on the purchase of firearms after the massacre at a gay nightclub in Orlando, but Republicans resisted those calls and accused gun control advocates of pulling political stunts.

TO RUN OR NOT TO RUN

He never delivered a monologue while clutching a skull, but Rubio spent much of the last two weeks doing a convincing Hamlet impersonation, weighing whether to run for re-election despite promising that his first term in the U.S. Senate would be his last. Republican leaders — worried that none of the GOP candidates angling to succeed Rubio would be able to hold onto the seat — were more than willing to fuel his deliberations.

On Wednesday, Rubio made it official. He threw his hat in the ring, a move that elbowed out Lt. Gov. Carlos Lopez-Cantera, a longtime friend, and two other candidates by the time the week was up. And that was only after a fourth contender, Republican Congressman David Jolly, had decided last week to bow out of the race and run for his own seat again.

The state’s junior senator, who had spent much of his year running for the White House and disparaging his place of work, now saw the Senate as a vital “check and balance on the excesses of a president” — even if real-estate mogul Donald Trump, the Republican nominee, is elected over his Democratic opponent, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

“The prospect of a Trump presidency is also worrisome to me. … If he is elected, we will need senators willing to encourage him in the right direction, and if necessary, stand up to him. I’ve proven a willingness to do both,” said Rubio, who told reporters last month he would be willing to speak at next month’s GOP convention, where Trump will clinch the nomination.

Democrats said the move smacked of political opportunism. And they were quick to bring up some of the same issues that dogged Rubio’s presidential bid, including his sporadic-at-best attendance at Senate votes that conflicted with his White House ambitions.

“Rubio lost 66 of 67 counties in March because he abandoned the people of Florida and showed himself to be nothing but an opportunistic career politician,” said Florida Democratic Party Chairwoman Allison Tant. “Today’s news only confirms that further.”

Still, polls indicated Rubio had a far better chance of beating Democratic Congressman Patrick Murphy, the establishment choice, or Democratic Congressman Alan Grayson, a liberal firebrand, in the November general election. And Rubio all but cleared the field, with Lopez-Cantera, Republican Congressman Ron DeSantis and businessman Todd Wilcox dropping their candidacies by the end of the week.

Developer Carlos Beruff trudged on, slamming Rubio as a career politician and making it clear he intended to remain in the race.

“The power brokers in Washington think they can control this race,” Beruff said in a fiery statement following Rubio’s announcement. “They think they can tell the voters of Florida who their candidates are. But the voters of Florida will not obey them.”

The dominoes fell quickly, particularly in DeSantis’s district, where many of the other candidates abandoned ship after the incumbent said he would run for the U.S. House again. But at least one state lawmaker — Rep. Fred Costello, R-Ormond Beach — decided to stick it out.

“Let me be clear. Congressman DeSantis and I both have outstanding conservative records,” Costello said in the statement. “This election will be based upon who the voters believe will best serve our community. Nobody is better prepared or will work harder to benefit the residents of Congressional District 6 than I. My record of Congressional District 6 community service is unmatched.”

Dozens of other candidates from across the state also qualified ahead of the Friday deadline, with every member of Congress drawing at least token opposition as other races took shape or changed slightly.

Democrat Andrew Korge dropped out of a high-profile battle against incumbent Republican Sen. Anitere Flores and instead waded into a Democratic primary for a nearby Miami-Dade County Senate seat. That put him in a three-way primary contest with incumbent Sen. Dwight Bullard and Ana Rivas Logan, who once served in the state House as a Republican.

In Congressional District 2, a largely rural and conservative seat in Northwest Florida, Fort White businessman Jeff Moran stepped aside and endorsed his former rival, Tallahassee attorney Ken Sukhia, in the GOP primary.

BEAR WITH US

There’s a fresh reason bears in Florida might target your pick-a-nick basket. Namely, no one will be allowed to shoot them for a while.

On a 4-3 vote Wednesday, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission shot down a staff recommendation that would have allowed a hunt in October, albeit one with fewer permits and smaller hunting grounds than the 2015 event that saw 304 bears killed over two days. But that doesn’t mean that bears are out of the woods for good.

“I don’t think it means hunting goes away,” Commission Chairman Brian Yablonski said at the end of a daylong meeting in the rural Franklin County community of Eastpoint.

Yablonski added that the delay will allow non-lethal efforts to take hold. Those efforts include expanding the availability of bear-proof trash containers in communities with high incidents of bear-human interactions.

The state agency has about $825,000 this year — due in part to money raised from the 2015 hunt — to match with money from local governments for the non-lethal options.

Opponents, including some who challenged the 2015 hunt in court and some wearing shirts that said “Bear lives matter,” told commissioners they intended to work against any killing of bears for sport, which they contend will hurt tourism in Florida.

“We’ve had two shootings recently that have given Florida a huge black eye,” said Katrina Shadix of Oviedo before the commission vote. “Do we want to add another controversial bear hunt to our image?”

But Newton Cook, a member of The Future of Hunting in Florida, said those who question the state agency’s scientists “are wrong” and simply seeking an excuse to call for a delay or postponement of the hunt.

“Thirty states have bear hunting,” Cook said. “This is not rocket science.”

‘THE FINAL STRAW’?

The chances that any shooting incident is going to change the fraught politics of guns in America are always slim, and the killings at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando have proven no different. After the incident that claimed 49 lives — in addition to shooter Omar Mateen — on June 12, both sides of the firearm debate were quickly back to their rhetorical battle stations.

State Sen. Greg Evers, a Baker Republican running for Congress, riled LGBT activists by running a contest for which the prize was an AR-15 — a gun similar to the one Mateen used at Pulse. Evers announced Monday morning on Facebook that he was giving away an AR-15 to a district resident who “likes” the social media post and shares it with others.

By the end of the day, Facebook had removed Evers’ gun giveaway promotion, saying it violated the social media site’s “community standards” policy that bans posts “promoting graphic violence.”

But the media maelstrom surrounding the gun contest continued.

Evers, who has received an “A” or “A-plus” rating from the National Rifle Association during his 15 years in the state Legislature, said he felt compelled to move forward with the gun giveaway after listening to President Barack Obama, who traveled to Orlando last week and has used the mass killing to push for stricter gun-control measures.

“It wasn’t an easy decision to move forward,” Evers said. “But when Barack Obama went down there and he blamed a terrorist attack on the weapon, that was the final straw.”

LGBT activists saw things differently.

“I think it is tasteless, disrespectful, disgusting, political pandering at its worst,” Stratton Pollitzer, deputy director of Equality Florida, an LGBT advocacy group that has raised more than $6 million for victims of the massacre. “The idea that he wants to put the same style assault rifle that was just used for mass murder into the hands of a random stranger is grotesque.”

Meanwhile, Congressional Democrats — including several from Florida — staged a daylong sit-in on the House floor in an unsuccessful effort to get Republican leaders to hold a vote on legislation barring people on government watch lists from purchasing guns.

STORY OF THE WEEK: After months of maintaining he would not run for a second term, U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio entered the race for his seat in hopes of preserving the Republican majority in the Senate.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “When they ask about guns, and then they lecture you to get rid of guns, that’s politics. It’s not medicine. We take our children to the doctor because they are sick. We don’t take them there for political lectures on guns.”—Marion Hammer, a longtime Tallahassee lobbyist for the National Rifle Association, on the legal fight over a Florida law that seeks to restrict doctors from asking questions and recording information about patients’ gun ownership.

by Brandon Larrabee, The News Service of Florida

Scott, Cabinet Honor Orlando Shooting Victims

June 25, 2016

At the state Capitol on Friday, Governor Rick Scott, his wife, Ann, and the three members of Florida’s Cabinet honored the victims of the June 12 attack on the Pulse nightclub in Orlando — the worst mass shooting in the nation’s history.

Scott, Attorney General Pam Bondi, Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam and Chief Financial Officer Jeff Atwater put yellow roses in front of 49 Florida flags — one for each of the club-goers who died after being shot by gunman Omar Mateen, who was later killed by police — lining the front lawn of the Capitol.

The flags were accompanied by photographs of each person who was killed in the attack at the gay nightclub.

“The memory of this horrific tragedy will never be forgotten, as well as the legacies of each of the 49 victims,” Scott said in a press release accompanied by photos of the memorial site. “While we can never completely heal from the pain of such loss, we continue to be reminded of each life taken in Orlando and their individual impact on so many. We mourn with the families and loved ones as they grieve, and ask all Floridians to continue praying for those affected by the terror attack in the coming days. This memorial will be a place to remember and honor their lives.”

The flags will remain up for 49 days.

Courtesy photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

by The News Service of Florida

Tornado Damaged Historic Century Methodist Church Coming Down

June 24, 2016

The tornado damaged 114-year old Century United Methodist Church is coming down, board by board, piece by piece..

“It’s being dismantled, not demolished,” Rev. Janet Lee said Thursday. “The hope is that there is enough wood there that is good enough to use in some way when we rebuild.”

The simple, but beautiful wooden church stood strong on Church Street since just after the turn of the Century. It was left precariously leaning  after a February EF-3 tornado lifted it off it’s foundation and shifted the entire building about two feet away. The building was deemed a total loss and in danger of collapse by a structural engineer.

In the days after the tornado, church members and volunteers worked, despite the danger, to remove stained glass windows, pews and other furniture, and chandeliers from the building. Members have former members have stopped by, some posing for pictures on the porch, and reminiscing  about the weddings and funerals and special services — the important moments in their lives and the in the lives of their families — that took place in the little wooden church.

“We tried to remove the things that had spiritual or historical importance,” Lee said.

Plans are already taking shape to rebuild the church.

“We will rebuild on that spot,” Lee said, “but there is no time frame right now.”

For now, church members meet across the street in a house owned by the church.

Pictured top and inset: The slow process of dismantling the tornado damaged Century United Methodist Church is underway.  Pictured below: A look inside the historic structure about a week after the February 15 tornado. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Sunny, Middle 90’s Today

June 24, 2016

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

Friday: Sunny, with a high near 95. West wind around 5 mph becoming calm.

Friday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 71. Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph.

Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 96. West wind around 5 mph becoming southeast in the afternoon.

Saturday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 73. South wind around 5 mph.

Sunday: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 95. West wind around 5 mph becoming southeast in the afternoon.

Sunday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 74. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm after midnight.

Monday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 93. Calm wind becoming southeast around 5 mph in the afternoon.

Monday Night: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 75. Southwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.

Tuesday: Showers and thunderstorms likely. Partly sunny, with a high near 92. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Tuesday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 74.

Wednesday: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 90.

Wednesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 74.

Thursday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 91.

Election Watch: Additional Candidates Officially Qualify Thursday

June 24, 2016

This is qualifying week for candidates seeking local office.

Friday at noon is the deadline to qualify for local offices. Those that qualified Thursday for local offices are listed below:

Superintendent of Schools:

  • Claudia Williams, DEM
  • Gerald Washington, Write In

County Commissioner, District 3:

  • Lumon May, DEM

ECUA, District 5:

  • William Fink, Write In

Pensacola City Council, District 1:

  • C. J. Lewis, NPA

Candidates that qualified through Wednesday were:

Tax Collector:

  • Buck Lee, Republican
  • Deb Moore, Democrat
  • Scott Lunsford, Republican

Sheriff:

  • Rex Blackburn, NPA
  • Douglas DeWayne Baldwin, Sr., Republican
  • John Johnson, Republican
  • Ron McNesby, Republican
  • David Morgan, Republican

Supervisor of Elections:

  • David Stafford, Republican

Property Appraiser:

  • Chris Jones, Democrat

Clerk of the Circuit Court:

  • Pam Childers, Republican

Superintendent of Schools:

  • Malcolm Thomas,  Republican

County Commissioner, District 1:

  • Jeff Bergosh, Republican
  • Audra Carter, Democrat
  • Jesse Casey, Republican
  • Karen Sindel , Republican

County Commissioner, District 3:

  • Mirza Aftab Ahmad, NPA
  • Delarian Wiggins – NPA

County Commissioner, District 5:

  • Steven Barry  - REP
  • Daniel Smillie – REP

School Board, District 1: (Nonpartisan office)

  • Kevin Adams
  • Willie Kirkland, Jr.

School Board, District 4: (Nonpartisan office)

  • Patty Hightower

School Board, District 5: (Nonpartisan office)

  • William Slayton Jr.

ECUA, District 1:

  • Vicki Campbell, Republican
  • James Faxlanger, Republican
  • Dawnmarie Kakatitieoy Kachachos-Ingwell – Write In

ECUA, District 3:

  • Clorissti Mitchell, Democrat
  • Elvin McCorvey, Democrat
  • John R. Johnson, NPA
  • Kennie Lyons, Democrat
  • Derrick Gainer, NPA
  • Charles Thornton – DEM
  • Tiffany Washington – NPA

ECUA, District 5:

  • James Hunt – NPA
  • Jim Taylor, Republican
  • Larry Walker, Republican

City Council, District 1: (Nonpartisan office)

  • P.C. Wu

City Council, District 3: (Nonpartisan office)

  • Andy Terhaar

City Council, District 5: (Nonpartisan office)

  • Gerald Wingate

City Council, District 7: (Nonpartisan office)

  • Anny Shepard
  • Jewel Cannada-Wynn

Escambia County Soil & Water Conservation, District 1: (Nonpartisan office)

  • Betty Ann Wilson

Escambia County Soil & Water Conservation, District 3: (Nonpartisan office)

  • Anne Bennett

SRIA: (Nonpartisan office)

  • Thomas A. Campanella

Century Mayor

  • Benjamin Boutwell
  • Felic Fussner
  • Freddie McCall

The following individuals pre-filed for office:

Century Town Council, Seat 2:

  • Annie Savage – Nonpartisan Office

Construction Begins On New Paved Walking Trail In Walnut Hill

June 24, 2016

Construction is now underway on a  new paved public walking trail in Walnut Hill.

As we reported in late 2015, the Escambia County Commission and the Escambia County School Board reached a 25-year agreement to allow the construction of the path near the Walnut Hill Community Center (also known as the Ruritan Building) on Highway 97, just north of Ernest Ward Middle School.

The asphalt walking path will be exactly one-quarter mile in length and will be eight feet wide. The path will be fully compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Benches and picnic tables will also be installed along walking path.

The property belongs to the Escambia County School Board, while the community walking path will be constructed by Escambia County Parks and Recreation under the agreement.

NorthEscambia.com photos/graphic, click to enlarge.


Scott Allocates Millions For Zika Fight

June 24, 2016

Gov. Rick Scott issued an executive order Thursday that pumps $26.2 million into the fight against the mosquito-borne Zika virus, as it appears Congress will wait until after its Fourth of July holiday recess before completing any deal addressing the disease.

Scott directed state Surgeon General Celeste Philip to oversee the spread of the money to county health departments, local mosquito districts and laboratories for training, mosquito surveillance, and the purchase of Zika Prevention Kits from federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We are in the middle of hot, rainy weather which is when mosquitoes are most prevalent,” Scott said in a press release. “It is clear that allocating this funding is necessary if we are going to stay ahead of the spread of this virus.”

The virus — which commonly results in a fever, rash, joint pain and red eyes — can, if caught during pregnancy, cause a serious birth defect called microcephaly and other fetal brain defects, according to the CDC. Scott added in the release that more than 40 entities have asked for more than $19 million to prepare for the virus.

Scott asked President Barack Obama on June 1 to unilaterally release federal funds to fight Zika. Obama had requested Congress provide $1.9 billion in funding to fight Zika.

The House, which had initially offered $622 million, approved a measure Thursday matching the Senate’s funding proposal of $1.1 billion for the Zika fight. However, some of the House provisions tied to the deal, but unrelated to fighting Zika, did not appear to be acceptable to Democrats and the White House.

One travel-related Zika case has been reported in Escambia County.

by The News Service of Florida

Lowes Community Heroes Spruce Up Century Healthy Start

June 24, 2016

Volunteers from the Lowes on Airport Boulevard in Pensacola worked Thursday to spruce up the landscaping around the Century Healthy Start.

Lowes selected Healthy Start as their Community Hero Project.  Lowe’s Heroes is a company-wide volunteer initiative that offers employees the opportunity to work on a project in their own neighborhood, helping to make their communities better places to live, work and play.

The volunteers painted  a handrail, installed landscaping, planted a tree and installed a bird feeder.

The Century Healthy Start building at 511 Church Street has been closed since being damaged in a February EF-3 tornado.  Healthy Start is expected to reopen in the building in late July.3

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

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