FDOT: Weekly Traffic Alerts

November 27, 2016

Drivers will encounter traffic variations on the following state roads in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties as crews perform construction and maintenance activities during the next week:

Escambia County:

·         U.S. 29 (State Road (S.R.) 95) Widening from Interstate 10 (I-10) to 9 Mile Road - Work will resume Monday, Nov. 28.  Alternating lane closures near the U.S. 29/Nine Mile Road overpass between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. as workers install barrier wall to accommodate the construction of the new bridge.

·         Perdido Key Drive (S.R. 292) Resurfacing from the Alabama State Line to the Intracoastal Waterway Bridge - Work will resume Monday, Nov. 28.  Daytime lane closures as crews perform shoulder reconstruction work.  Traffic flaggers will be on site to assist with traffic control.

·         9 Mile Road (S.R. 10/U.S. 90A) Widening from Pine Forest to U.S. 29 - Work will resume Monday, Nov. 28. Motorists traveling Untreiner Avenue between Nine Mile Road and Powell Street will encounter intermittent lane closures between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. as crews lay additional asphalt for an upcoming traffic shift.  Once paving is complete, traffic will be shifted eastward onto the temporary asphalt as crews begin drainage improvements on the west side of Untreiner Avenue.

·         Fairfield Drive (S.R. 727/295) Resurfacing from Mobile Highway to North Pace Boulevard – Work will resume Monday, Nov. 28.  Intermittent and alternating lane closures between Mobile Highway and North Pace Boulevard between 8:30 p.m. and 6:30 a.m. as crews perform paving operations.

·         New Warrington Road/Navy Boulevard (U.S. 98) Routine Maintenance from gulf Beach Highway to south of U.S. 98 (Walmart entrance) – North and southbound intermittent and alternating lane restrictions from 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 28 until 3 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 29 as crews make repairs to the roadway.

·         U.S. 98 Routine Maintenance from the ramp from New Warrington to south of Pinewood Lane- East and westbound intermittent and alternating lane restrictions just west of the Bayou Chico Bridge from 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 28 until 3 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 29 as crews make repairs to the roadway.

·         I-10 / U.S. 29 Interchange Improvements Phase I - The U.S. 29 north to I-10 westbound ramp will be closed from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 30 and Thursday, Dec. 1

as crews perform bridge work. Traffic will be detoured north to make a U-turn at Broad Street to access I-10 westbound.  Drivers will also encounter lane closures on I-10 east and westbound, near U.S. 29 (Exits 10A and 10B), from 6 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 3 to 10 a.m. Sunday, Dec. 4 as crews perform pipe repairs.

·         Pensacola Bay Bridge Replacement (U.S. 98) – The westbound outside lane and right turn lane between the bridge and 17th Avenue in Pensacola will be closed from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 27 through Thursday, Dec. 1 as crews to perform take soil samples.

Santa Rosa County:

·         Pensacola Bay Bridge Replacement (U.S. 98) – The westbound outside lane near the east end of the bridge in Gulf Breeze will be closed from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 27 through Thursday, Dec. 1 as crews take soil samples.

· I-10 Resurfacing from east of S.R. 87 to the Okaloosa County Line- Intermittent and alternating lane closures east and westbound between the S.R. 87 interchange and the Okaloosa County line from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 27 through Friday, Dec. 2 as crews perform construction activities.   Motorists are reminded the speed limit is reduced to 60 MPH within the lane closure.

·         S.R. 87 Widening from two miles south of the Yellow River to Hickory Hammock Road (County Road 184) – Intermittent lane closures near the south end of the Yellow River Bridge the week of Monday, Nov. 28.  Lane restrictions will be in effect from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. as crews make preparations for upcoming traffic shift.

·         U.S. 90 Routine Maintenance west of Chumukla Highway intersection – The westbound, outside lane will be closed from 8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 29 to 5 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 30 as crews perform maintenance activities.

Drivers are reminded to use caution, especially at night, when traveling through the construction zone, and to pay attention for workers and equipment entering and exiting the work area.  All activities are weather dependent and may be delayed or rescheduled 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.

UF/IFAS: Five Tips For Avoiding Common Holiday Health Pitfalls

November 27, 2016

Have you ever reached the end of a holiday buffet with a plate filled with more food than you intended?

The holiday season is primetime for overeating, said Nan Jensen, family and consumer sciences agent with University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension.

Jensen’s job is to teach residents how to buy and prepare healthy meals and keep up a healthy lifestyle. “My programs are based on the idea that food is medicine,” she said. “This is the idea that food and lifestyle can help prevent and manage chronic diseases, such as heart disease and diabetes.”

While exercising 30 minutes a day and filling half your plate with fruits and vegetables is good advice year-round, the holidays present a special set of challenges for our health and wellness, Jensen acknowledged. Jensen has these tips for avoiding common holiday health pitfalls:

1. Be mindful. “Be aware of what you put into your body, and think about what it will do for your body,” said Jensen. If you’re in an endless buffet line, try to put only those things on your plate that you really want and that will do your body good.

2. Make every calorie count. “You want to make sure that you’re getting the most bang for your buck, nutritionally speaking, when you put food on your plate,” said Jensen. For example, fruits and vegetables are highly nutritious but are lower in calories than many less nutritious foods. Jensen recommends reserving a small portion of your plate for something decadent and filling the rest with nutrient-dense foods.

3. When it comes to alcohol, take it slow. “We always teach ‘alcohol in moderation,’” said Jensen. “In addition to containing lots of sugar and calories, alcohol can take away our inhibitions when it comes to indulging in other food and drink. Pace yourself by drinking a glass of water in between drinks.”

4. Keep up activity levels. Keep up whatever activity routine you normally have throughout the year, said Jensen, though don’t attempt any big changes in your fitness or nutrition regimen. “Don’t necessarily try to lose weight during the holidays—just try to maintain your weight where it is,” she said.

5. Take the focus off food. “Sometimes food is the center of family gatherings, especially during the holidays, and that can lead to overeating. Think about other activities you can do together that will still be fun for everyone,” said Jensen. “And don’t stress about making the holidays perfect—that can lead to stress eating.

Judge Halts Worker’s Comp Rate Hike Over Sunshine Issues

November 27, 2016

Little more than a week before businesses were slated to get hit with increased workers’ compensation insurance rates, a Leon County circuit judge Wednesday blocked the hike because of violations of Florida’s Sunshine Law.

An organization that files workers’ compensation rate proposals for insurers quickly said it would appeal.

The 73-page ruling by Leon County Circuit Judge Karen Gievers dealt with a 14.5 percent rate increase scheduled to start taking effect Dec. 1. The planned increase, which has drawn heavy attention from business and legal groups, stems from Florida Supreme Court rulings this year that found parts of the state’s workers’ compensation insurance laws unconstitutional.

Gievers ruled, in part, that the National Council on Compensation Insurance — the organization that files rate proposals for the industry — did not comply with legal requirements about holding public meetings during its deliberations on the hike. Also, she wrote that the organization, commonly known as NCCI, held improper closed-door meetings with staff members of the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation.

“The clear and convincing evidence demonstrated that NCCI and the OIR (Office of Insurance Regulation) held a series of secret meetings in the shade … and not in the Sunshine as required, meetings at which decision maker NCCI (through its staff) discussed and decided the substance of the rate increases NCCI proposed,” Gievers wrote. “Far from being meetings in the Sunshine required by law, the meetings between the OIR staff and NCCI staff were designed to, and had the effect of shutting the public out of meaningful participation in the rate making process.”

NCCI released a statement Wednesday afternoon saying it was “very disappointed” in the ruling and vowing to challenge it.

“We continue to believe that NCCI and the Florida OIR have fully complied with the law,” the statement said. “NCCI plans to appeal the trial court’s decision.”

James F. Fee Jr., a Miami attorney who represents injured workers, filed the lawsuit Aug. 10, as insurance regulators were considering a proposal by NCCI to raise rates by 19.6 percent. The Office of Insurance Regulation later required that the proposal be scaled back, and the 14.5 percent hike was approved in October.

The plan to increase rates largely resulted from a Florida Supreme Court ruling in April that said the state’s strict limits on attorneys’ fees in workers’ compensation cases were unconstitutional. Another Supreme Court ruling in a case involving an injured St. Petersburg firefighter also contributed to the increase.

Gievers focused heavily on part of state law that requires open meetings when rating organizations, such as NCCI, hold committee meetings to discuss workers’ compensation rate changes. She wrote that two NCCI committees dealt with rate filings in the past but that the organization contended it had delegated to an actuary the work of preparing what are known as “off-cycle” filings, such as the filings after this year’s Supreme Court rulings.

But Gievers said a series of meetings occurred during the development of the rate proposal and that the public was not allowed to take part.

She wrote that the “undisputed evidence established that none of the meetings at NCCI were open to the public, established that no minutes were kept and established that there was no notice to the public in advance of the meetings. Further, the undisputed evidence established that NCCI did not provide plaintiff Fee with all of the rate-related information he requested on more than one occasion.”

The ruling could add fuel to an expected battle about the workers’ compensation insurance system during the 2017 legislative session. Attorneys for injured workers have largely blamed the insurance industry — and, as an extension, NCCI — for the planned rate hikes, while business groups argue that attorneys’ fees drive up costs.

Bill Herrle, executive director of the small-business group NFIB/Florida, issued a statement after Wednesday’s ruling that took aim at workers’ attorneys.

“Today’s opinion on workers’ comp is just another tactic by the unscrupulous trial bar to put blinders on the Legislature and conceal the ridiculous fees they extract from the workers’ comp system,” Herrle said.

But Mark Touby, an attorney who is president of the group Florida Workers’ Advocates, called the ruling a “tremendous victory for Florida businesses and the workers they employ.”

“It is our hope that this well-reasoned ruling will put a halt to NCCI’s history of secret meetings and outrageous rate-hike requests, which only served to bail out the insurance companies’ alarming pattern of denying legitimate claims and then making Florida employers cover the cost of those errors,” Touby said.

by Jim Saunders, The News Service of Florida

Bryant Thomas Cooper

November 27, 2016

Bryant “Coop” Cooper, 19, of Jay, died Friday, November 25, 2016, in the Children’s Hospital of Sacred Heart in Pensacola.

He was a Georgia peach born February 23, 1997 at Henry General Hospital in McDonough, GA. Bratt would eventually become his home where he knew everyone’s name.

Bryant was chosen Monday, October 27, 2014, to drop everything he knew about the world he lived in and the life he loved so dearly, to go on a journey many experience, but only few understand-especially for children.

Bryant fought Stage 4 Neuroendocrine cancer bravely, compassionately and unselfishly with so many other children who were in the same fight, just a different name.

Bryant absolutely loved deer hunting, fishing, hog hunting and mud riding. He loved his truck and especially after cancer, he spent a lot of time riding back wood dirt roads. He could ride for hours. He loved Alabama football, just not as much as his dad or brother.

His friends were very special to him and a big part of his life. One of his favorite things was when they would all go to a movie, out to eat, the yogurt bar and Waffle House at 2 in the morning.

Bryant’s life dream was to be a mechanic with John Deere. Had cancer not been part of God’s plan for Bryant, he would be attending a two-year college program at this point to achieve that dream. Nothing made him happier than getting dirty with a John Deer tractor.

The service will be at 2 p.m., Tuesday, November 29, 2016, at First Baptist Church of Bratt with the Rev. Delbert Redditt directing.

Visitation will be held from 6-9 p.m. on Monday, November 28 at Petty Eastside Chapel Funeral Home in Atmore.

Bryant is survived by his father, Marion Cooper of Bratt; his mother, Janet Little Cooper of Jay; his older brother, Austin Cooper of Pensacola; paternal grandmother, Doris T. Cooper; numerous uncles, aunts and cousins.

Bryant was preceded in death by his maternal grandparents, Rev. Thomas and Joyce Little of Jay; paternal grandfather, Lawrence Cooper of Bratt; his uncle Carl Cooper of Bratt and his cousin Reagan Reid Little of Louisiana.

William King Sharp

November 27, 2016

William King Sharp (Pete, Bill) passed away November 24, 2016. He was born in McAllen, Texas on June 14, 1942 to A.B. Sharp and Joyce Church, who both preceded him in death.

He was in the Army during the Vietnam War then became a successful homebuilder in Houston for many years until he retired and moved to Pensacola in 2005. He loved to cook, laugh and be full of mischief. We will miss all the fun we had with him and all the many things he helped us do.

Pete (Bill) is survived by his wife of 36 years, Susan, his children, David (Dayton, TX), Greg and wife Ashley (LaPorte, TX), and Cassandra (Milton, FL), two precious grandchildren, Hunter and Emma, his sister, Linda (Pensacola) and his very special friends, Vicki Pulse and Henrietta Cook of Pensacola.

Pursuant to his wishes, there will be no service. Our thanks to all of his many doctors, West Florida Hospital, Life Care Center and Covenant Hospice for the care they all gave him in the past few years.

‘Gentle Giant’ Bryant Cooper Loses Battle With Cancer

November 26, 2016

Bryant Thomas Cooper, 19, lost his battle with cancer on Friday.

“My precious son… left his cancer-filled body this morning to be made whole in the glory of God,” his mother, Janet Cooper, wrote on Facebook.

“Even in his last days, Bryant was the most caring, gentle giant I’ve ever seen. He loved everyone. Moments before Bryant left us, he squeezed my hand with such a strong grip until his last breath. I’ll never forget that precious moment with my baby boy.”

“Bryant fought the hardest of battles taking chemo that was made for adults more than 30 years ago,” Janet Cooper wrote.  During her son’s battle with cancer, Janet Cooper became a proponent of childhood cancer awareness, urging other to “go gold” for the cause.

During those long hours as Bryant battled cancer, anger began to grow inside Janet. Not just the anger one might expect toward cancer, but an anger of what’s being done to cure childhood cancer.

On average, 43 teens are diagnosed with cancer each day. And before the day ends, a childhood cancer will claim seven lives.

“There are billions and billions of dollars spent on cancer research every year in this country. But only four percent is spent on find a cure for childhood cancers,” she said in 2015 interview.

Unlikely Friends

We introduced you to Bryant and his unlikely friend,2-year old Kena Spivey, in previous stories here on NorthEscambia.com.

In late October of 2014, Bryant was a happy, focused young man with a love for football. And John Deere…that love was strong enough that he had even landed a dream job of sorts with a local John Deere dealership. But pain in his back — he thought just a pulled muscle or maybe kidney stones — sent him to the emergency room.  The preliminary diagnosis was not good…suspicious spots on his liver. More tests for a final diagnosis that Bryant and his mother, Janet Little Cooper, never expected on November 4, 2014.

Cancer. Not just cancer, but a Stage 4 rare neuroendocrine cancer, and it had spread with a vengeance to other parts of this body.

Kena was diagnosed with a Stage 3 tumor on her cervix and uterus on July 7, 2014.

Kena was in Sacred Heart Hospital for a chemo treatment, and Bryant was in for his first ever treatment when the two met on November 17. Her parents, Charles and Dawn Spivey, were walking her down the hallway trying to calm her when they met Janet.

Kena’s tears stopped when she saw Bryant lying in his hospital bed. The  friendship continued to grow up until her passing in late September.

Dry Weekend, Then A Chance Of Rain

November 26, 2016

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 46. North wind around 5 mph.

Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 68. North wind 5 to 10 mph.

Saturday Night: Clear, with a low around 35. North wind around 5 mph.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 69. Northeast wind around 5 mph becoming southeast in the afternoon.

Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 50. Southeast wind around 5 mph.

Monday: A 20 percent chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a high near 76. South wind 5 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph.

Monday Night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 65. South wind around 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Tuesday: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 77. South wind 10 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph.

Tuesday Night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 65. South wind around 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Wednesday: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 73. Chance of precipitation is 70%.

Wednesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 44.

Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 65.

Thursday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 42.

Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 65.

FHP: Buckle Up To Arrive Alive This Thanksgiving

November 26, 2016

The Florida Highway Patrol (FHP) is helping to ensure all motorists Arrive Alive this Thanksgiving holiday and is reminding motorists to buckle up before they hit the road. During the 2015 Thanksgiving holiday period, law enforcement agencies statewide worked 9,906 crashes. Tragically, 84 people lost their lives, and 17 of those individuals were not wearing seatbelts.

The public is encouraged to report impaired or aggressive drivers by dialing *FHP (*347). Also, remember to check traffic conditions before leaving for a trip and allow sufficient time to arrive at your destination safely.

Newly Elected Rep. Frank White Takes First Step Toward Re-election Bid

November 26, 2016

After winning a seat in the Florida House on November 8, Rep. Frank White, R-Pensacola, has taken the first step toward running for re-election in 2018.

White and newly elected Rep. Rene Plasencia, R-Orlando, joined 22 incumbent House members in opening campaign accounts for 2018, according to the Florida Division of Elections website.

White won 61.3 percent of the vote earlier this month as he defeated Democrat Ray Guillory in House District 2, which includes the southern part of Escambia County and small area of Santa Rosa County.

The News Service of Florida contributed to this report.

Downtown Comes Alive With Santa, Elf Parade And 400,000 Lights

November 26, 2016

Friday night was a very festive evening in downtown Pensacola. The night started with Santa and the Pensacola Elf Parade and ended with the lighting ceremony for the downtown lights.  Over 400,000 white lights are up in the Palafox Street area, illuminating historic buildings, parks, shops, galleries and outdoor spaces.

For more photos, click here.

Courtesy photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.


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