FDOT: Weekly Traffic Alerts

June 12, 2016

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

Escambia County:

  • U.S. 29 – Intermittent and alternating lane closures continue within the town of Century and north beginning at Champion Drive.
  • Interstate 10 (I-10)/U.S. 29 Interchange Improvements – The following traffic impacts will occur Sunday, June 12 through Thursday, June 16 from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. to allow crews to install barrier wall and prepare for bridge widening work:
    • Alternating lane closures on I-10 near U.S. 29 (exits 10A and 10B).
    • The U.S. 29 south to I-10 eastbound ramp will be closed. Traffic will be detoured south to make a U-turn at Diamond Dairy Road.
    • The U.S. 29 north to I-10 westbound ramp will be closed. Traffic will be detoured north to make a U-turn at Broad Street.
  • I-10 Widening – Intermittent and alternating lane closures on I-10 eastbound, between Davis Highway (Exit 14) and Scenic Highway (Exit 17), from 7 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. the week of June 13 as crews install guardrail.
  • I-110- Minor delays between the Maxwell Street ramp and the I-10 overpass from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. Sunday, June 12 through Thursday, June 16.  A slow moving vehicle will be used to place reflective pavement markers along the roadway.
  • U.S. 98 east of Naval Hospital – FHP DUI Checkpoint, Friday, June 10, anticipate eastbound outside lane closures.

Santa Rosa County:

  • I-10 WideningAlternating lane closures, between the Escambia Bay Bridge and State Road (S.R.) 281 (Avalon Boulevard/Exit 22), from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. Sunday, June 12 through Thursday, June 16 as crews continue widening work. In addition, alternating lane closures on Avalon Boulevard near the I-10 interchange for bridge work.
  • I-10 Santa Rosa and Okaloosa Rest Area –Resurfacing entry/exit ramps of rest areas in Santa Rosa and Okaloosa counties continues through Friday, June 17.   Lane closures will be in effect 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.  Only one rest area in each county will be closed during paving operations. Variable message boards and the I-10 Intelligent Transportation System (ITS) will be used to alert drivers of the temporary closure.
  • S.R. 281 (Avalon Boulevard)- Intermittent lane closures and slow moving operations from U.S. 98 to the toll bridge from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. continuing through Thursday, June 30 as crews perform striping operations. There will be no work performed Friday through Sunday.
  • S.R. 87 and S.R. 89 from S.R. 4 to the Alabama line – Intermittent and alternating lane closures and slow moving operations from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. continuing through Friday, July 15 as crews perform striping operations.
  • U.S. 98 – Crews will perform striping operations and install raised pavement markers (RPMs) from the Pensacola Bay Bridge to Central Parkway (approximately nine miles) Sunday through Thursday nights through Thursday, June 30. Motorists may encounter minor traffic delays from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m.
  • S.R. 399 over U.S. 98 – Overnight repairs to the S.R. 399 southbound overpass over U.S. 98 will be in place from 8 p.m. to 5:30 a.m. throughout the project. U.S. 98 will be reduced to one lane in each direction from Shoreline Drive to just east of S.R. 399 to allow westbound U.S. 98 traffic to be diverted to eastbound U.S. 98. Westbound U.S. 98 access to S.R. 399 will be closed. An on-site detour will direct traffic to turn left on Daniel Street, left on Shoreline Drive and then right on eastbound U.S. 98 to access S.R. 399 via the at grade on ramp.

All activities are weather dependent and may be delayed or re-scheduled in the event of inclement weather. Drivers are reminded to use caution, especially at night, when traveling in a work zone and to watch for construction workers and equipment entering and exiting the roadway.

Century, Flomaton To Present Annual Fireworks Show

June 12, 2016

The annual fireworks show presented by the towns of Century and Flomaton will return again this year. The show has been scheduled for Sunday night, July 3.

The show alternates each year between the two towns…this year’s show will be at Showalter Park in Century at “dark”.

The $5,000 show cost is split between the towns. The show is being held on July 3, according to Century Mayor Freddie McCall, because it would have cost $10,000 if held on the July 4 holiday.

Pictured: Last year’s fireworks show in Flomaton. NorthEscambia.com file photos by Ditto Gorme, click to enlarge.

Congressional Delegation To Get Zika Update

June 12, 2016

Florida’s congressional delegation will hold a meeting this week in Washington to receive presentations about the Zika virus.

Panelists are expected to include Tom Frieden, director of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Democrat Alcee Hastings and Republican Vern Buchanan, who are co-chairmen of the delegation, announced Wednesday that the meeting will be held June 15.  The meeting comes as Congress remains deadlocked on funding to address the mosquito-borne virus, which emerged last year in South America and is particularly dangerous to pregnant women.

As of Tuesday, Florida had totaled 133 Zika cases that didn’t involve pregnant women, including one in Escambia County.

Also the state has monitored 38 cases in which pregnant women showed symptoms of Zika or met a definition of having the virus, according to the Florida Department of Health website. All of the Florida cases were contracted by people who traveled elsewhere, but state health officials worry that the disease could spread in Florida as mosquitoes thrive in the warmer summer months.

by The News Service of Florida

Market In The Park

June 12, 2016

The Atmore chamber held their first in a series of “Market in the Park” events Saturday morning at Heritage Park on South Main Street.

The market featured local produce, baked goods, breads, handmade furniture and more.

Additional Market in the Park events are set for June 25, July 9 and August 13 from 7:30 until 11 a.m. For more information or to register as a vendor, call the Atmore Area Chamber of Commerce at (251) 368-3305.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.



One Injured In Barrineau Park Road Crash

June 12, 2016

One person was injured in a single vehicle crash Saturday on Barrineau Park Road near Barrineau Lane.

The accident was reported just after 9 a.m. The driver of a passenger car apparently lost control and crashed into a guardrail; the driver was transported by Escambia County EMS to an area hospital with injuries that were not considered critical.

The accident is under investigation by the Florida Highway Patrol. The Molino and Cantonment stations of Escambia Fire Rescue also responded.

Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Yard Sale Helps Tate Showband Raise Funds For Hawaii Trip

June 12, 2016

The Tate High School Showband of the South held  an indoor multi-family yard sale in the school’s Fryman Gym Saturday. All proceeds will benefit the band’s upcoming trip to Hawaii. The Tate Showband is raising funds to perform in Hawaii in a mass band to commemorate the 75th anniversary of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 2016. Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Extension Services To Host Field Corn Day

June 12, 2016

The University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Escambia County Extension will host its annual Field Corn Day Tuesday, July 19 from 10 a.m. to noon at the UF/IFAS West Florida Research and Education Center, located at 4253 Experiment Road, Highway 182 in Jay.

The event will feature 27 replicated corn varieties and more than 15 corn variety demonstration plots, with varieties from Dyna-Gro, Monsanto-Dekalb, Croplan, Syngenta, Pioneer, Terral and Augusta Seed. Several company representatives will be on hand to provide overviews of their products, and attendees will take a field tour to see how the corn varieties are working at the West Florida Research and Education Center.

Topics for the Field Corn Day include:

  • Corn variety trial and demonstration
  • Environmentally Smart Nitrogen and urea blends
  • Application timing for corn production

Lunch will be provided. For meal planning purposes, call the Jay Extension Office at (850) 675-3107 or the Escambia Extension Office at (850) 475-5230.

File photo.

Wahoos Beat Biscuits

June 12, 2016

For the second night in a row, Pensacola second baseman Alex Blandino played a big role in the Blue Wahoos victory Saturday, earning a two-out bases loaded walk that scored Pensacola first baseman Kyle Parker with the winning run in the 11th inning.

Pensacola won its third straight game in its last at bat beating the Montgomery Biscuits, 3-2, in front of its 14th sellout crowd of 5,038 this season at Blue Wahoos Stadium.

On Friday night, Blandino scored the winning run in a 2-1 game when Pensacola catcher Joe Hudson hit a chopper deep in the hole at shortstop that Montgomery shortstop Willy Adames threw away for an error.

Blandino may be 3-31 in his last 11 games since May 26 but he has walked nine times, including twice Friday as well as getting a single to center field, as his family watched the game from the stands.

Pensacola manager Pat Kelly said Blandino, the Cincinnati Reds No. 8 prospect according to MLB.com, praised Blandino’s patience in the pressure-filled at bat. The Blue Wahoos have played two extra-inning games in its last three victories.

“He went through a little rough spot but he’s a much better player than he has shown the last couple of weeks,” Kelly said. “It was a 3-1 count and most players want to get a base hit but he was very patient. Blandino did a great job.”

Blue Wahoos catcher Kyle Skipworth and third baseman Eric Jagielo both hit solo home runs to left field in the fifth inning to give Pensacola a 2-0 lead, but Montgomery fought back.

For Skipworth, who’s recovering from breaking his left ankle in December, it was his first home run for Pensacola in his sixth game and 20th at bat. One out later, Jagielo jacked his fourth homer of the season.

But Montgomery came back in the sixth to score one, 2-1, when Biscuits third baseman Patrick Leonard hit a sacrifice fly ball to centerfield that scored first baseman Casey Gillaspie. Gillaspie upped his on-base streak to 27 games and has failed to get on base in only three of Montgomery’s 62 games this season.

The Biscuits tied the game, 2-2, in the top of the ninth when second baseman Tommy Coyle singled to right field past Blandino. Coyle then stole second base and Skipworth’s throw to second sailed to centerfield, allowing Coyle to reach third. Montgomery’s No. 9 hitter Pat Blair then doubled to left center to score Coyle.

Raisel Iglesias pitched two scoreless innings, allowing two hits and striking two out in his first rehab start in Pensacola. Iglesias, the Cincinnati Reds opening day starter went on the disabled list with an impingement in his right throwing shoulder earlier this season.

Iglesias was efficient throwing up to 95 mph and fooling two Montgomery Biscuit batters in a row on breaking balls in the low 80s in the second inning. Iglesias even showed his sidearm pitch. He threw 30 pitches, including 22 for strikes.

The first hit by Biscuits leadoff hitter was a check swing single to third base. The other was a rip by right fielder Cade Gotta on a groundball under the glove of a diving Pensacola third baseman Eric Jagielo into left field.

Cincinnati Reds opening day starter had five starts and was 1-1 with a 3.49 ERA with 29 strikeouts in 28.1 innings.

“I thought he was crisp,” Kelly said of Iglesias, who is the third Reds starter to make a rehab appearance this season in Pensacola. Kelly said he joked with Iglesias, “He came into the dugout and I told him this is the Double-A, this isn’t the big leagues, you have to understand these guys can hit. But he was very effective and showed different looks.”

Amir Garrett, the normal starter, then pitched the next five innings, allowing one run on three hits, two walks and struck out three.

Kelly praised Garrett for coming in after Iglesias and pitching well. He did allow three runners to reach third base in his last three innings on the mound.

“Garrett did well but he had three high stress innings in a row and we were concerned about his arm speed,” Kelly said. “I have to credit Garrett. It’s not a situation a starter is used to. He pitched out of some big jams and did a nice job.”

Pensacola remained in sole possession of first place in the Southern League South Division with a record of 36-25. The Biloxi Shuckers also won and improved to 35-26 to remain one game behind the Blue Wahoos.

Wiley T. Byrd, II

June 12, 2016

Wiley T. “Buddy” Byrd II, of Westville, died Saturday, June 11, 2016, at his residence in Westville.

Wiley was a native of Pensacola and graduated from Ernest Ward High School, Class of 1966. He later served in the U.S. Air Force in Germany for three years but lived most of his life in Marianna. Buddy was a member of Annie Jones United Methodist Church in Walnut Hill. He loved the rodeo life, was an avid cowboy and loved animals.

He is preceded in death by his parents, Wiley T. and Helen Rankin Byrd.

Survivors include his son, Wiley T. “Johnny” Byrd, III of Devine TX; three daughters, Deana Coursey (Jac) of Dahlonega, GA, Jennifer Carstens (Eric) of Dayton, Ohio, and Anneke Tschirhart (Jody) of Devine, TX; three sisters, Wanetta A. McGinty (Thomas) of Walnut Hill, E. La Vonne Swindle (Danny) of Pensacola, and Rhonda K. Byrd-Lee (Bud), of Westville; one brother, Steven L. Byrd (Sue), of Walnut Hill; eight grandchildren and one great-great grandchild.

Funeral services will be at 10 a.m., Wednesday, June 15, 2016, in Walnut Hill at Annie Jones United Methodist Church with Danny Swindle officiating.

Interment will be in Walnut Hill Cemetery with James & Sikes Funeral Home Maddox Chapel of Marianna directing.

Work Continues To Uncover History Of Old Muscogee Cemetery

June 11, 2016

Flanked by his daughter and grandson, Walter McQueen of Cantonment became emotional when they walked down a newly blazed trail leading him to a freshly cleared patch in the woods and saw the headstones of Muscogee residents dating back to the late 1800s.

The 68-year-old had been trying, since he was a teenager, to find the black section of the Old Muscogee cemetery, which had disappeared behind vines, brush and trees and swallowed up by leaf debris decades ago.

In May, Gulf Power Environmental Affairs and Plant Smith employee teamed up with the Northwest Florida Water Management District staff to begin clearing the vegetation to provide families access. (Read previous story, click here.)

“This is amazing to me because I tell you my granddad Elias McQueen is here,” McQueen said. “My grandmother told me he died in 1946, a year before I was born. And I have an uncle, Jim McQueen, here who died of polio at 16 years old. That’s what’s amazing to me about this area.”

McQueen couldn’t find his own family members’ gravesites. He believes the sites are nearer to the River Annex Road under an oak tree, in an area that has yet to be cleared. But he’s nevertheless grateful to be able to stand in a portion of the historic site that was once a part of a thriving timber town that no longer exists. What once was Muscogee is now part of Cantonment.

“Words cannot explain what I feel in my heart,” he said. “I have always thought, ‘When are we going to be able to find these graves?’ This brings back so much of our history. Naturally, families want to know where their family members are buried. This gives us so much closure.”

McQueen wants to help with future efforts to restore the cemetery and plans to locate the families of the people in the graves that have been found.

McQueen’s grandson, Kaleb Gulley, 19, who just graduated from high school, has had a fascination about the town his grandfather always told him about and was thrilled when he read a news story about the cleanup effort.

He was also clearly excited to finally be walking through the cemetery as he searched for possible signs of his great-grandfather’s grave.

“When I was riding on the school bus, I’d look directly out here and think, ‘Wow there’s a cemetery there,’” Gulley said. “There is so much history in Muscogee, and I like to hear about the lumber mills and post office and the people who used to live here. I’m enjoying this moment.”

Gulley is also looking forward to passing on to his children, someday, his grandfather’s stories about the ghost town and show them the cemetery.

Rebekah McQueen-Morris, 32, said there used to be an African-American Holiness church across the dirt road from the cemetery. “The members were buried here in the segregated section,” she said.

To be sure, the site is a reminder of the days of segregation.  It also provides a snapshot of the people who supported the timber industry, served in the military and, as McQueen-Morris pointed out, had acquired some financial means based on some of the ornate monuments and marble headstones they left behind.

“I grew up in Cantonment, and it’s a blessing that we have another piece of the puzzle to our history,” she said.

“A lot of times we try to research and learn things about our ancestors but we don’t have the resources, or something like this to occur to help us find out about our history,” she said. “Once we find out about our history, where we come from, we find out who we are.”

« Previous PageNext Page »