UWF Rolls Past Chowan, 51-23, In Home Opener

September 17, 2017

The University of West Florida football team clicked in all three phases Saturday night, as the Argos defeated Chowan 51-23 in their home opener at Blue Wahoos Stadium.

UWF improved to 2-0 on the season after having an off week due to Hurricane Irma. The Argos finished with 305 yards of total offense, with 133 on the ground and 172 through the air. UWF tied the school record for points in a game and surpassed the 40-point plateau for the sixth time in 13 all-time contests.

UWF also scored touchdowns on offense, defense and special teams in the same game for the first time in program history.

Mike Beaudry passed for 149 yards on 11-of-22 with a career-high three touchdowns. Antoine Griffin had a team-best three receptions for 78 yards, while Ka’Ron Ashley made two spectacular scoring catches in the first half as UWF built a 21-10 halftime advantage.

The Argonauts jumped out to an early 7-0 lead when senior defensive back Josh Marshall corralled his second interception of the year, picking off Hawks quarterback Bryce Witt and taking it 31 yards to the end zone.

It didn’t take long for Chowan to fire back as the Hawks capitalized on a West Florida kick-catch interference on the kickoff, allowing Witt and company to start their next drive inside the Argos 36-yard line. On the fifth play of the drive, Witt would connect with wide receiver Edwin Thomas from eight yards out to tie the game at 7-7.

West Florida responded right back, as Marcus Clayton raced 65 yards on the ensuing kickoff to set up the go-ahead touchdown. On the third play of the drive, Beaudry found Ashley from 18 yards out for his first score of the night.

With just under 10 minutes remaining in the half, Chowan linebacker Antuwan Hicks picked off Beaudry, putting the Hawks in great field position on their own 48-yard line. That set up an eventual 20-yard field goal for Connor Killeen, making it a one possession game.

As they did all night, West Florida answered right back. Forty-one seconds is all the Argos would need, as Beaudry connected with Griffin for a gain of 55 yards on the first play of the drive. That set the stage for another Ashley score, this one from nine yards out.

With under four minutes remaining in the third quarter, sophomore kicker Austin Williams converted on 38-yard field goal to extend the Argonauts lead to 24-10. Chowan would respond with a 6-play 75-yard drive, to pull within seven at 24-17.

But UWF responded with 27 unanswered points to build a 51-17 lead late in the fourth. Beaudry scored from a yard out and he completed a 23-yard strike to Rodney Coates, with Chris Schwarz finishing his night with a 2-yard run and Quadavis Battle scoring when he recovered a blocked punt that Johnathan Coleman took off Killeen’s foot.

Chowan remained winless in three games and finished with 335 yards of total offense. Witt had 242 yards passing and three touchdowns on 21-of-35.

Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: Unfathomable

September 17, 2017

Days after Hurricane Irma slashed a destructive swath through Florida, it’s still unclear exactly how much damage the state and its inhabitants have suffered. And it might be weeks — or even months — before the massive storm’s impact is known.

From the Keys to Naples to Jacksonville, Irma wreaked havoc on homes and businesses, turned off lights and air conditioning for more than half the state and caused severe damage in the agriculture industry.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgBut the most shocking result of Irma was the deaths of eight elderly nursing home residents — literally across the street from a major hospital — in Hollywood after the nursing facility’s air conditioning stopped working. The tragedy, which drew national attention, created a furor among local and state officials, including Gov. Rick Scott and U.S. Sens. Bill Nelson and Marco Rubio.

The week brought some other news, but, with more than two-thirds of Florida’s counties qualifying for disaster relief and reeling from Irma, nobody paid much attention.

By week’s end, power was being steadily restored, many streets were cleared of debris, and cleanup was well underway.

Now may not be the time to begin the Monday-morning quarterbacking about how — or if — the state could have done better to prepare for the storm or to cope with its aftermath.

But the heartbreaking deaths of the eight nursing home residents will certainly be at the forefront of the scrutiny.

“We throw our elderly away,” Bendetta Craig, whose 87-year-old mother lived at The Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills, said. “That’s my mother, somebody’s mother, somebody’s sister, somebody’s father. They’re not dollar signs.”

`INEXCUSABLE’ TRAGEDY

The nursing home deaths left people in Florida and throughout the nation wondering how such an event could happen.

“Every facility that is charged with caring for patients must take every action and precaution to keep their patients safe — especially patients that are in poor health,” Scott tweeted Wednesday, after the news broke about The Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills.

Scott’s administration shut down admissions to the Broward County facility on Wednesday, after the seniors died and the remaining residents were evacuated. Scott also ordered the Agency for Health Care Administration on Thursday to oust the facility from the Medicaid program.

“It is clear that this facility cannot be responsible for Florida’s vulnerable patients, and therefore the state will stop them from providing care,” Scott’s office said in a statement announcing the Medicaid decision.

Local officials have launched a criminal investigation into the deaths, and state agencies are also investigating the situation. Nelson, D-Fla., and Rubio, R-Fla., called on federal health officials to get involved.

Nelson described it as an “inexcusable tragedy that frail patients would die of heat exhaustion without it being recognized.”

In a lengthy statement, nursing home administrator Jorge Carballo said the facility did not lose power during Hurricane Irma, but it lost a transformer that powered the air-conditioning system. The statement said the nursing home contacted Florida Power & Light and followed up about when repairs would be made.

“In compliance with state regulations, the center did have a generator on standby in the event it would be needed to power life safety systems,” Carballo said in the statement. “The center also had seven days of food, water, ice and other supplies, including gas for the generator. Additionally, when the transformer powering the A/C went down, staff set up mobile cooling units and fans to cool the facility. Our staff continually checked on our residents’ well-being — our most important concern — to ensure they were hydrated and as comfortable as possible.”

The facility is rated “below average” on a federal scorecard that includes information about issues such as inspections, staffing and quality of care. The federal Medicare.gov website includes a Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services report that said a health inspection was conducted by the state March 31 and found a series of deficiencies at the facility. While some of the deficiencies appeared likely to affect few residents, the report indicated other more-serious deficiencies were found in areas such as food safety, disposal of garbage and infection-control programs.

The Hollywood tragedy also revealed that dozens of nursing homes were without electricity or had been evacuated because of Irma.

`IT’S GOING TO BE A LONG ROAD’

After Irma made landfall in the Florida Keys and the southwestern portion of the state Sunday, curfews were imposed in many areas, much of the Keys remained closed, and millions of people continued to lack electricity as cleanup work was expected to reach into the billions of dollars.

The state was also coping with intense flooding on both coasts and the interior, where rising rivers left some houses marooned in the middle of marshes.

Later in the week, tempers flared when officials barred Keys evacuees from returning to the lower islands.

“I know for our entire state, but especially the Keys, it’s going to be a long road. There is a lot of damage,” Scott said after viewing the damage from the air Monday. “I know everyone wants to get back to normal. I know everyone wants to get started, but you’ve got to be patient. We’ve got to get the first responders to the Keys. We’ve got to get water going again. We’ve got to get electricity going again. We’ve got to get sewers going again. It’s going to take a lot of time.”

On Tuesday, the governor teamed up with former University of Florida quarterback Tim Tebow to thank volunteers and workers at the state Emergency Operations Center in Tallahassee and in hard-hit Lee County.

“In the midst of a really tough time, you know I think so many people that were hurting have something to hold on to because there were so many volunteers … and they knew there were people in it with them,” Tebow said during the Tallahassee stop. “It doesn’t take away their pain, and it doesn’t take away their fear and doubt of the unknown, but it does give them a little comfort to know that there are people battling with them and loving and supporting them.”

President Donald Trump and his wife, Melania, joined Scott and his wife, Ann, to tour the damage in Southwest Florida on Thursday.

Trump handed out hoagies to storm-addled survivors in Naples.

Trump praised Scott and thanked first responders, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the military for how they handled the lead-up to the storm and were dealing with recovery efforts.

“And I know you’re also in the process, but to think of the incredible power of that storm. And while people unfortunately passed, it was such a small number that nobody would have — people thought thousands and thousands of people may have their lives ended. And the number is a very small number which is a great tribute to you,” the president said.

`WET FEET’ AND EXTENSIVE DAMAGE

Parts of Florida’s agriculture industry are in “tatters” as rural communities continue to face severe conditions after the storm, Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam said Thursday.

Putnam said the storm hammered citrus, vegetable and sugarcane growers, though he didn’t put a cost estimate on the damage. And as many farmers and residents of Florida’s rural counties wait for power to be restored, they will soon be inundated with mosquitoes because of water left behind by Irma, he noted.

U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue, the former Georgia governor, will be in Florida on Monday to tour the damage as the state seeks federal aid, Putnam told reporters at the Emergency Operations Center in Tallahassee.

Putnam, a Bartow resident who is running for governor next year, called the impacts “extensive” for growers, particularly those in the struggling citrus industry. Even before Irma, the 2016-2017 orange harvest was down 16 percent from the prior year, while the grapefruit harvest dropped 28 percent in the same time.

In Southwest Florida, between 70 and 80 percent of fruit “is on the ground,” and widespread flooding will bring further woes, Putnam said.

“Citrus trees cannot tolerate wet feet. They can’t tolerate wet roots,” he said. “And we will continue to see these numbers of losses grow over time.”

STORY OF THE WEEK: Hurricane Irma made landfall in the Florida Keys and Southwest Florida on Sunday, leaving a trail of destruction through the state and cutting off power to millions of residents and businesses.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: “Although the details of these reported deaths are still under investigation, this situation is unfathomable,” — Gov. Rick Scott, after news broke of the deaths of residents of The Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills in Broward County.

by The News Service of Florida

Woman Critical After Possibly Jumping From Vehicle In Domestic Dispute

September 16, 2017

A woman was airlifted to a Pensacola hospital in critical condition after reportedly jumping from a moving vehicle in Flomaton Friday afternoon.

Shortly before 5 p.m., Escambia County (FL) EMS responded to the area of Flomaton Small Engines on Highway 31 near Highway 113 after the incident. The woman, believed to be in her 30’s, was transported by ambulance to the Escambia County (FL) EMS Post  in Century and transferred to LifeFlight as a “trauma alert”.

The vehicle was reported to be traveling at an estimated 35 mph at the time of the incident.

Flomaton Police Chief Bryan Davis said it appeared the incident may have stemmed from a domestic dispute, but it was not immediately clear what exactly had occurred. The incident remains under investigation by the Flomaton Police Department.

Further details, including the woman’s name, have not yet been released.

NorthEscambia.com file photo, click to enlarge.

Five Injured In Highway 29 Crash

September 16, 2017

Five people were injured in a two-vehicle crash Friday night near Cantonment.

The accident happened just before 7 p.m. at the intersection of Highway 29 and Old Chemstrand Road. There were seven total people involved the crash — five transported to area hospitals with minor injuries, two that refused treatment.

The accident is under investigation by the Florida Highway Patrol.

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

Tate Aggies Beat PHS 27-13 (With Photo Gallery)

September 16, 2017

Looking to bounce back from loss to West Florida last week, the Tate High School Aggies beat the visiting Pensacola High School Tigers 27-13 Friday night.

For a photo gallery, click here.

The Aggies were first on the scoreboard on a Hunter Riggan quarterback keeper from nine yards out. A missed point after, the Aggies were on top in Cantonment 6-0 with 2:13 remaining the first quarter.

PHS answered with a short TD run with 7:18 to go in the half.  Then with a good kick,  Pensacola High was on top 7-6.

But Aggies were not about to head to the lockers at halftime on the downside.  Senior Ladarrel Page  was into the endzone next on the outside to make it 13-7 for the Aggies at the half.

After a scoreless third quarter, the Aggies scored again.  Following a long run from Shermari Jones,  Page was in  from 27 yards out  to make it 20-7 as Tate went on to a 27-13 win.

The Aggies are now 2-1, while PHS fell to 1-3.

The Tate High School will host Milton next Friday night for homecoming.

For a photo gallery, click here.

NorthEscambia.com photos by Jennifer Repine, click to enlarge.

Atmore Man Arrested For Bicyclist Murder, Three Others Busted On Pot Charges

September 16, 2017

Atmore Police have arrested a local man in connection with an August 31 homicide.

Ladarious Jamaal Crenshaw, 22, was charged for the murder of Shawn Oneil Quarles. He is being held in the Escambia County Detention Center in Brewton.

On August 3, Atmore Police responded to Ann Street after a 911 call stating that a man had been shot. Quarles was found in the street suffering from gunshot wounds. He was transported to Atmore Community Hospital where he died a short time later.

An Atmore Police Department investigation found that Quarles was riding his bicycle to the store to purchase cigarettes.
Atmore Police Department investigators, Escambia County Sheriff’s Office deputies and members of the U.S. Marshall’s Regional Fugitive Task Force, assisted in the capture of Crenshaw  at the Patterson Street Apartment in Atmore.

As  Crenshaw was apprehended, authorities arrested three other Atmore men on narcotics charges. Deante D. Knight, 19, was charged with possession of marijuana first degree; Kenneth Curry, 21, was charged with with possession of marijuana first degree and resisting arrest; and Demario E. Bowens, 27, was charged with possession of marijuana first degree and giving false information to law enforcement. Bowens was also booked as a fugitive from justice due to an outstanding felony burglary warrant in Florida.

Friday Night High School Football Scores

September 16, 2017

Here are final high school scores from around the area Friday night:

FLORIDA

  • Blountstown 59, Northview 13 [Read more...]
  • Tate 27, Pensacola 13 [Read more...]
  • Jay 39, Wewahitchka  6
  • West Florida 22, Mosley 14
  • Pine Forest 20, Gulf Breeze 19
  • Lincoln 28, Escambia 20
  • Pace 37, Washington 26

ALABAMA

  • Escambia County 26, Monroe County 8
  • Escambia Academy 35, Jackson County 0
  • Clarke County 50, Flomaton 14
  • W.S. Neal 41, Satsuma 32
  • T.R. Miller 18, Hillcrest 15

Pictured top: Action under the Friday night lights as Northview hosts Blountstown. NorthEscambia.com photo, click to enlarge.

Chiefs Suffer Tough 59-13 ‘Self-Inflicted’ Loss To Blountstown (With Gallery)

September 16, 2017

The Blountstown Tigers defeated Northview 59-13 Friday night in Bratt. The Chiefs, 1-3, have now lost three straight games.

For a photo gallery, click here.

“It was a tough night,” Northview head coach Derek Marshman said. “That was a great football team we played tonight. Make no mistake about it but a lot of our wounds tonight were self-inflicted.”

The Chiefs were first on the board with a touchdown from Ontario Minor with 9:09 on the clock in the first quarter, with Blountstown answering with  a touchdown of their own.

“You know I thought we came out on the first drive and did what we thought we could do and marched right down the field and scored. They responded with a touchdown and then we started kind of self-inflicting some things. We had a blocked punt, multiple turnovers, multiple big plays. They had a fake punt for a touchdown,” Marshman said.

The Chiefs’ only other score of the night came at 5:49 on the clock in the second on a pass from Seth  Killam to Ray Bush.

Blountstown was on an unstoppable roll scoring 21 in the first quarter and 30 in the second  to make it 51-13 at the half. The Chiefs held the Tigers to just eight points in the third before a scoreless fourth quarter.

“We are an improving football team but we are not good enough to hedge the other team out especially a team like Blountstown. A lot of things here were self-inflicted but like I said a lot of credit goes to them too,” the coach said.

Next week, Northview hits the road to Blountstown to take on the Blue Devils of Holmes County (2-1).

“We will get back to the drawing board next week. We’re not going to quit. We are going to keep fighting. I know this coaching staff is going to fight for these guys day and night. We will be back up here this weekend getting ready. Holmes County is a really good football team as well. We are going to keep fighting. There’s no quitting this program. There’s no quitting this team. There’s no quitting this coaching staff so we are going to keep fighting,” Marshman said.

For a photo gallery, click here.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

Fall Gardening Tips

September 16, 2017

As fall approaches, now is the time to start preparing your landscape for the upcoming cooler weather, according to the UF/IFAS extension service.

Flowers

  • Cut back, and remove old flower stalks from flowering annuals and re-fertilize in order to obtain one more color before cool weather.
  • Prepare beds for the planting of cool season annuals next month. Some plants to establish for fall, winter and early spring include: pansy, petunia, snapdragon, larkspur, stocks, statice, bachelor button, calendula, cleome, alyssum, marigolds, verbena, dianthus and candytuft.
  • Divide perennials such as Shasta daisy, canna, amaryllis, daylily, coneflower, violets, and ornamental grasses like mondo grass and liriope.
  • Cut strong stems of roses to encourage new growth for final flush of the year.
  • Find a local source, or order wildflower seeds for fall planting. Be certain to choose a mixture that is specifically for the south. Prepare the area, but wait until November to seed them.

Trees and Shrubs

  • Last month to fertilize woody ornamental shrubs in the landscape.
  • No pruning unless it’s absolutely necessary. This is probably the worst time of year to do major pruning of shrubs. Late summer/fall pruning can stimulate tender growth that might be damaged by low winter temperatures.
  • Plant woody ornamentals, including trees, shrubs, vines and ground covers during the fall and early winter. They respond well to planting late in the year because our relatively mild winters allow for root growth. Fall planted shrubs, for example, are well on their way toward having their roots established before hot weather arrives next spring.
  • Select crape myrtles while in bloom.
  • Examine the small twigs on the outer canopy of hardwood trees for black twig borer damage. Remove and destroy infested twigs.
  • Pine needles fall during September and October. Rake and use them in the vegetable and flower garden as well as in shrub beds. Pine needles make excellent mulch. Apply generously to obtain a depth of 2 to 3 inches on the soil surface after they have settled.
  • Mature palms should receive an application of granular fertilizer. Use a special palm fertilizer that has an 8-2-12 +4Mg (magnesium) with micronutrients formulation. Apply one pound of fertilizer per 100 sqft of canopy area or landscape area.

Vegetable Garden

  • Prepare the soil now, allowing about 3 weeks between the incorporation of amendments and planting. In September sow seeds of beets, broccoli, brussels sprouts, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, collards, endive, escarole, kale, kohlrabi, leek, lettuce, mustard, onions, parsley, radishes and turnips.
  • Last planting of beans (bush, lima and pole), cucumbers and summer squash
  • Clean out the spring/summer vegetable garden once plants have stopped producing. Remove any that are known to have been diseased or heavily insect infested during the previous season.

Lawns

  • Check the lawn weekly and watch for lawn pests. Check for chinch bugs and sod webworms in St. Augustine, spittlebugs and sod webworms in centipedegrass and mole cricket damage in all grasses
  • Last month to fertilize bahiagrass, bermudagrass, St. Augustinegrass and Zoysiagrass using a complete fertilizer applied at 1.0 lb nitrogen per 1000 square feet containing 50% soluble and 50% slow-release nitrogen.

Florida Tab For Irma Already Mounting

September 16, 2017

Florida has preliminarily outlined more than $273 million in Hurricane Irma costs for federal reimbursement, with the money primarily used for storm preparation and debris removal.

The projection is from 25 state agencies for impacts from the storm that made landfall Sunday in the Florida Keys and Southwest Florida and then traveled up the state. The storm, which continued to leave nearly 1.9 million homes and businesses without power Friday morning, also caused still-unknown billions of dollars in damages — from property destruction to economic impacts — across the state.

The initial state projection, including $157.8 million for pre-storm protective measures and $90.8 million for debris removal, had not been completed by some agencies, including the Department of Citrus and the Department of Education.

But by comparison, the final tally for Hurricane Matthew, which affected the state without making landfall last October, was about $268.5 million.

Some agencies are listing modest impacts from Irma. The Department of Revenue put its costs at $954 for protective measures, and the Florida Lottery, which suspended games Sunday and Monday, reported $1,322 in impacts, of which $1,000 was for utilities.

The state Division of Emergency Management started to compile the numbers after President Donald Trump on Wednesday approved Gov. Rick Scott’s request for an emergency declaration.

The declaration authorized the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate disaster relief efforts, including equipment and resources.

The order also provides 75 percent federal funding for debris removal and emergency-protective measures.

More than 40 percent of the state’s initial projected costs, $112.77 million, were tied to storm preparation by the Division of Emergency Management.

The Department of Transportation, as part of its $108.5 million in storm costs, estimated debris removal will come to $86.8 million.

The Department of Corrections, which evacuated more than 12,000 inmates and on Thursday said some inmates will remain at alternative locations until road conditions improve and facilities can undergo necessary repairs, put its costs at $21.55 million.

With every member of the Florida National Guard activated, the Department of Military Affairs put its initial costs at $7.8 million.

Meanwhile, with the roughly 1,700 members of the Florida Highway Patrol working 12-hour shifts, the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles has placed its expenses at $4 million.

The Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, with more than 200 officers providing evacuation support and post-storm search and rescue missions, was up to $2.3 million.
The Department of Financial Services projected a $1.58 million impact, while the Department of Health was at $4.7 million.

The South Florida Water Management District has a preliminary $4.8 million tab, of which $3.3 million is projected for debris removal and $836,312 is for protective measures.

The Southwest Florida Water Management District, meanwhile, put costs at $1.58 million for protective measures.

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