Warning Of Black Ice Tonight, Including Florida Counties

January 6, 2017

The National Weather Service is warning of black ice as far south as I-10 tonight, including in Escambia, Santa Rosa and Okaloosa counties in Florida.

Although all precipitation is expected to come to an end across the region by 3 a.m. Saturday, very cold temperatures will continue to move nto the area. Lows will drop into the mid to upper 20s as far south as  the I-10 corridor.
Icy conditions will persist through at least early Saturday morning across any inland areas that receive frozen precipitation this evening. In addition, patchy black ice is possible as far south as I-10  due to the potential of residual moisture from the rain event freezing, particularly on bridges and overpasses.

Motorists are encouraged to stay off the roadways. Motorists are urged to use extreme caution if travel is necessary through early Saturday morning, especially on bridges, overpasses, and other elevated roadways.

Two People Injured In Predawn Highway 29 Crash

January 6, 2017

At least two people were injured in a three vehicle predawn crash on Highway29.

The accident happened about 4:50 a.m. on Highway 29 and Old Chemstrand Road. Both of the injured were transported to area hospitals by Escambia County EMS. The accident remains under investigation by the Florida Highway Patrol. Further details have not been released.

NorthEscambia.com photos by Kristi Barbour, click to enlarge.

Winter Weather Black Ice, Sleet, Snow And Cold

January 6, 2017

There is a winter weather advisory in effect for the Alabama counties in our area, with a possible accumulation of sleet up to a half inch tonight. Rain and some sleet  is expected in Florida, mostly north of Molino, according to the National Weather Service.  Black ice — patches of ice on the roadway — is possible even after the rain ends as far south as I-10.

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast for our Florida readers:

Tonight: Rain, possibly mixed with sleet before midnight, then a slight chance of rain, freezing rain, and sleet between midnight and 3am. Low around 25. Wind chill values between 15 and 20. North wind around 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. Little or no ice accumulation expected. New sleet accumulation of less than a half inch possible.

Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 37. Wind chill values between 15 and 25. North wind around 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph.

Saturday Night: Clear, with a low around 21. North wind 5 to 10 mph.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 45. Northeast wind 5 to 10 mph.

Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 27. East wind around 5 mph.

Monday: Sunny, with a high near 54. Southeast wind around 5 mph.

Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 41. Southeast wind around 5 mph.

Tuesday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 66. South wind 5 to 10 mph.

Tuesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 57.

Wednesday: A 30 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 71.

Wednesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 57.

Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 73.

Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 57.

Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 73.

Northview Grad Deploys To Africa In Command Of Arkansas Guard Unit

January 6, 2017

A Century native has deployed for Africa in command of his Arkansas Army National Guard Unit.

Capt. Tony Stallworth of the Echo Company 39th Brigade Support Battalion is a 2002 graduate of Northview High School.

The unit’s 66 soldiers will first go to Fort Bliss in Texas for about a month to prepare for a 10 to 11 month mission in Djibouti on the Horn of Africa, providing logistical support for an American airbase.

Stallworth is the son of the late Anthony Stallworth, Sr. and Beverly Stallworth. He and his wife Shieisha Stallworth have two daughters, Amaya and Anya Stallworth.

Pictured top: The Echo Company 39th Brigade Support Battalion deployed  from Warren, AR. Pictured inset: Capt. Tony Stallworth. Photos courtesy the Saline River Chronicle News, Saline for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

GED Classes Begin Monday In Molino

January 6, 2017

Adult Basic Education/GED classes will be starting Monday, January 9th at the Molino Community Center. Tuition is $30 per semester and students may enroll anytime as there is an open enrollment policy.

George Stone Technical Center is partnering with the Molino Community Center to offer ABE/GED classes every Monday and Thursday from 6-8 p.m. Classes are actively taught by two certified teachers and personalized instruction is given based on each student’s academic level. Tutors are also available during the class in case extra help is needed.

GSTC also offers GED classes at Ensley Elementary every Tuesday and Thursday from 4-6 p.m with no tuition charge. Classes are also offered at Pathways For Change every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from 9:30 a.m. until noon. Free childcare is also provided at the Pathways For Change site.

Judge Rejects Poarch Creek Gretna Track’s Bid To Change Gambling Ruling

January 6, 2017

A federal judge has rejected a request from a tiny Northwest Florida pari-mutuel operated by the Poarch Creek Indians of Atmore to reconsider his decision in a legal battle between the Seminole Tribe and the state about gambling at tribal casinos.

More than a month after U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle ruled in favor of the Seminoles, Gretna Racing  in Gadsden County, operated by the Poarch Creek Indians of Atmore, sought in December to intervene in the long-running case.

Hinkle’s ruling in November allowed the tribe to continue offering “banked” card games, such as blackjack, at most of its casinos.

The ruling addressed issues related to “designated player” card games, also known as “player banked” games, that have been offered in recent years at pari-mutuel facilities across the state. Hinkle ruled that the games violate a 2010 agreement that gave the Seminoles exclusive rights to conduct blackjack and other banked games.

Part of the 2010 agreement authorizing banked card games expired in 2015, prompting the legal dispute. By ruling that the designated-player games violated the agreement, Hinkle cleared the way for the tribe to continue offering blackjack and the other games.

Pari-mutuels — allowed by state law to conduct games only in which players compete against each other — first launched the designated-player games in 2011. Florida gambling regulators approved a rule governing the games in 2014.

The state’s lawyers insisted that the games, in which a player acts as the “bank,” do not violate the Seminole agreement — also known as a compact — or state law, even if the manner in which they are being played at some cardrooms might.

But Hinkle, siding with the tribe in his November order, disagreed.

“The essential feature of a ‘banked’ game is this: The bank pays the winners and collects from the losers,” he wrote.

Gretna is among the numerous pari-mutuel cardrooms in the state that offer the player-banked games, which have eclipsed traditional poker in popularity.

In a motion filed on Dec. 15, lawyers for Gretna argued that Hinkle’s ruling could put the small facility and its operators at risk.

“Any form of player banking … could be construed to be a crime subjecting Gretna’s officers to potential criminal prosecution and possible imprisonment,” wrote attorneys David Romanik and Marc Dunbar, who are also part-owners of the Gadsden County facility.

But on Wednesday, Hinkle — who last month also turned down a request by lawyers for the state asking the judge to revamp his decision — flatly refused to reconsider his ruling, saying Gretna had no right to intervene in the case.

“And even if Gretna could have qualified for permissive intervention on a timely application — not an obvious proposition — I would exercise my discretion to deny intervention at this late date as both untimely and otherwise inadvisable,” Hinkle wrote in the two-page order.

Hinkle, however, indicated his ruling in the dispute between the state and the tribe does not affect Gretna.

“The judgment in this case has no binding effect on Gretna, and the order explaining the judgment will have a practical effect only to the extent a future tribunal finds the reasoning persuasive,” Hinkle wrote. “If, as Gretna seems to believe, it has additional evidence that will persuade a judge to reach a different result, Gretna will be free to present the evidence if ever its own interests become the subject of a judicial or administrative proceeding.”

Meanwhile, Gretna is awaiting a decision from the Florida Supreme Court in a lawsuit filed after state gambling regulators refused to grant the track’s request for a slot machines permit.

Gretna sought the permit after Gadsden County voters approved a referendum allowing slots at the pari-mutuel.

The Gretna case is focused on whether gambling operators can add slots if county voters give the go-ahead, even without the express permission of the Legislature. The court’s decision could have far-reaching implications: Voters in seven other counties — Brevard, Duval, Hamilton, Lee, Palm Beach, St. Lucie and Washington — have also approved slots at local pari-mutuels.

Amid the legal wrangling, Gov. Rick Scott’s administration and the tribe are again trying to negotiate a revised compact after the Legislature last year failed to approve an accord. Senate President Joe Negron, R-Stuart, recently told reporters that he has made it a priority to get a compact ratified, a move that would require legislative authorization.

by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida

Diapers, Baby Wipes Could Get Tax Break

January 6, 2017

Two Democratic lawmakers have filed proposals that would provide sales-tax exemptions for diapers and baby wipes.

Sen. Lauren Book, D-Plantation, filed the tax-break bill (SB 252) on Thursday, slightly more than a month after House Minority Leader Janet Cruz, D-Tampa, filed the House version (HB 71). The proposals, which will be considered during the legislative session that starts March 7, would provide tax exemptions for baby diapers, adult diapers and baby wipes.

Lawmakers during the upcoming session also are expected to consider bills (SB 176 and HB 63) that would provide sales-tax exemptions on feminine hygiene products such as tampons.

by The News Service of Florida

Tate Wrestling Team Wins Holiday Invitational Tournament

January 6, 2017

The Tate High School wrestling team won the recent Tate High Invitational Tournament.

Several  Tate Aggie wrestlers received medals. They were:

  • Jacob Cochran
  • Lee Pedicord
  • Alex Porter
  • Matthew Blalock
  • Kendall Townley
  • Isaiah Brill
  • Juan Alvarez
  • Jeff Rafuse
  • Alex Young
  • Orlando Milhouse
  • Azaya Purifoy
  • Jacob Neales
  • Jacob Nowling

Second place at the tournament went to Dora, AL and third place was Fultondale, AL.

Pictured: The Tate High School wrestling team. Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Judge Denies Bond Reduction For Century High Speed Chase Suspect

January 6, 2017

A Century man that led law enforcement on a high speed chase from Pensacola to Baldwin County last October will remain in jail.

At a hearing this week, Judge Thomas Dannheisser denied a motion to reduce bond for 29-year old Roosevelt Lamont Dixon. He remains in the Escambia County Jail with bond set $162,600. He is charged with fleeing and eluding law enforcement at a high speed, knowingly driving with a suspended  license second offense, cocaine possession, possession of drug paraphernalia, fleeing and eluding law enforcement, robbery, driving with a suspended license first offense, aggravated battery and carjacking.

On October 20, an Escambia County deputy in an unmarked vehicle first spotted Dixon on Pensacola Boulevard near I-10 in a Dodge Charger. Dixon took I-10 to Davis Highway as deputies worked to get marked units in the area in order to conduct a traffic stop. He continued to Creighton Road. A traffic stop was attempted in the Rooms-To-Go parking lot on Davis Highway at Airport Boulevard. Dixon allegedly fled north on Davis Highway to I-10 back to Pensacola Boulevard.

The pursuit traveled north to Cantonment and Molino at speeds over 100 mph. The vehicle was chased into Alabama and Highway 112 before Florida deputies lost sight of it. Baldwin County law enforcement located the vehicle near the Foley Beach Expressway and I-10. Dixon was apprehended in a wooded area following a K-9 search.

Several schools in the North Escambia area were place on lockdown during pursuit as a precaution.

According to the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office, this was not the first time Dixon had run from them.

On June 16, deputies conducted on a traffic stop on a Hyundai Sonata with no tag on Tulip Street near Century, just yards from the Alabama state line. The deputy reported that after the Sonata came to a stop, Dixon allegedly pushed the female driver out of the car, jumped into the car and fled, nearly running over her and taking her vehicle without her permission. Dixon fled into Alabama.

Dixon was also wanted since 2015 on drug charges after the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office Narcotics Unit and a SWAT team executed a search warrant at his home and recovered items including crack cocaine and spice.

Dixon remains in the Escambia County Jail without bon

Walter Henry Sollie

January 6, 2017

Walter Henry Sollie, 37, of Atmore, AL, died on Sunday, December 7, 1941, when his ship, the USS Oklahoma, was attacked at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.

His unidentified remains have been buried for the past 75 years at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Hawaii. He was identified earlier this year through a DNA match with relatives.

He was born on November 23, 1904, in Myrtlewood, Marengo Co AL, to Frederick Ernest and Florence Vallie McCrary Sollie. He joined the Navy in 1923 and served until his death in 1941. He had served on the USS Pruitt, USS Huron, USS North Hampton, USS Maryland and finally, the USS Oklahoma.

He is survived by 5 nieces: Jean Bodiford, Greenville AL; Carol West, Chuchula AL; Iris (Bruce) Plowman, Kewanna IN; Betty (Tom) Turnipseed, Milton; and Cindy (Frank) Mayes, New Orleans LA; and 2 nephews: Clifford (Betty) Allen, Mobile AL; and Fred (Liz) Sollie, Jr, Clermont FL. He is also survived by 12 great nieces and nephews and their children. He was preceded in death by his father; his sister, Nina Mae Cobb; and his son, Walter Carlyle Sollie.

In lieu of flowers, please make donations in honor of Walter Henry Sollie, to the Naval Aviation Museum Foundation (NAMF), or online at http://www.navalaviationfoundation.org/ways-to-give/charter-memoriam/ or via check to 1750 Radford Blvd, Suite B, NAS Pensacola FL 32508.

A funeral service will be held January 6, 2017 at 11:00 am at the Pensacola Aviation Chapel aboard NAS Pensacola. An interment will follow at Barrancas National Cemetery at 12:30 pm. Oak Lawn Funeral Home is entrusted with the arrangements. – See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/pensacolanewsjournal/obituary.aspx?pid=183259268#sthash.mRZrkW1D.dpuf

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