Gulf Power Takes On Large Scale Rechargeable Battery Tech

July 13, 2017

Gulf Power and its parent, Southern Company, Wednesday officially launched the latest battery storage research project in Southern Company’s operating territory. The project represents another important milestone in the work to build the future of energy.
The two-year McCrary Battery Energy Storage Demonstration will demonstrate the capabilities and requirements of an energy storage system designed to help industrial and commercial customers store and use energy on demand, while improving resiliency and potentially helping customers save on energy costs in the future.

Located in Pensacola, at Gulf Power’s Douglas L. McCrary Training and Storm Center on Pine Forest Road, the new research project will test and evaluate a 250 kilowatt/1 megawatt-hour Tesla Powerpack lithium-ion industrial energy storage system. Insights gained from the Gulf Power demonstration are expected to accelerate the development of battery storage technology across the Southern Company system. The lithium-ion technology under evaluation is the same battery chemistry used in electric vehicles and consumer electronics such as laptops.

Company executives and experts hosted a commissioning and ribbon-cutting ceremony to mark the project’s opening.

“Gulf Power is proud to be involved in this battery energy storage demonstration at the McCrary Training and Storm Center and to be in the forefront of evaluating innovative energy technologies,” said Stan Connally, Gulf Power Chairman, President, and CEO.  “Throughout our history, we have been host to the development of energy solutions that have resulted in greater energy efficiency, cleaner energy production, and value for our customers – and this commissioning event signals our on-going commitment to build a better energy future.”

“At Southern Company, we are constantly broadening our industry-leading expertise to harness new technologies that can deliver clean, safe, reliable, affordable energy to customers,” said Southern Company Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Kimberly S. Greene. “This collaborative research project with Gulf Power will deepen our understanding of battery energy storage systems and the value they can provide.”

The McCrary Battery Energy Storage Demonstration was developed by Southern Company research and development in partnership with Gulf Power and with support from the Electric Power Research Institute and Tesla.

Specifically, the project aims to further the understanding of the siting, installation and operational requirements of commercial- and industrial-scale energy storage systems. It will provide information on the advantages battery storage can offer customers and energy providers through peak shaving, demand management, ancillary services, energy arbitrage and backup power.

Prior to the McCrary Center battery energy storage project, the energy company launched a Powerwall home battery system in partnership with SolarEdge and Tesla for several applications including rooftop solar energy storing, maximizing the impact of time-of-use rates by charging directly from the grid, and for studying the technology to see the benefits of power grid reliability and efficiency.

Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Even Without Announcement, Scott Runs For U.S. Senate

July 13, 2017

Calling Gov. Rick Scott’s likely bid for the U.S. Senate an “open secret” would be a misnomer — there’s no secret there, open or otherwise.

Scott continues to sprint across the state for official events that easily double as campaign swings — this week alone, he’s done a pair of ceremonial bill signings and two events to highlight law-enforcement pay raises he signed into law last month.

The only mystery is when the governor will make his 2018 plans official. Observers say there’s no hurry.

“Because he’s potentially the biggest name in that race on the Republican side, he can take his time, really,” said Aubrey Jewett, a political science professor at the University of Central Florida.

Scott has repeatedly brushed off questions about when he might run, saying the public is “tired of long campaigns.”

He also has personal experience to draw on: Scott announced his first run for governor as a virtual unknown in April 2010 before beating Attorney General Bill McCollum in an August GOP primary and Democrat Alex Sink in the general election that November.

This time, Scott would probably need to start a little bit sooner.

“He can probably push it into late in the fall. Obviously, he is running already,” said Rick Wilson, a Republican strategist.

The governor began laying the groundwork for a possible campaign months ago. He has kept intact his first fundraising committee, “Let’s Get to Work,” which has raised more than $11.5 million since Scott won re-election in 2014.

At the federal level, Scott has announced he would chair the “New Republican” super PAC, saying the goal of the committee “is to make the Republican Party Great Again” — part of an overall Scott theme of tying himself closely to President Donald Trump.

In addition to trips across the state, Scott has traveled to Washington, D.C., and continues to raise his profile on national issues.

On Monday, Scott held a “Venezuelan Freedom Rally” in Miami to slam the authoritarian regime of President Nicolas Maduro.

“Today, as hundreds of people rallied together, a clear message was sent to Maduro and his gang of thugs: the movement will not be silenced — freedom and democracy will thrive in Venezuela,” Scott said in a statement released by his office Monday.

“Basically, his actions and his words have made it pretty clear that he intends to run, and his bank account makes it clear that he intends to run,” Jewett said.

Democrats have also shown they have no doubt that Scott is running. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has hammered the governor repeatedly over the past few months. On Wednesday, they slammed “Self-Serving Scott’s self-promotional press tour” on law-enforcement pay raises, saying Florida officers still make less than many counterparts in other states.

“Rick Scott’s self-serving agenda has taken Florida to the bottom of the nation in household income and wages — and under Scott even Florida’s brave law enforcement officers make less than almost anywhere else in the country,” said David Bergstein, a spokesman for the committee.

U.S. Bill Nelson, the Democratic incumbent who Scott would face next year, has also taken a few subtle and not-so-subtle jabs at the governor.

Still, no formal announcement seems to be in the works.

After being governor since January 2011, Scott also lacks one of the key reasons for an early announcement — making sure voters, and particularly campaign contributors, know a candidate’s name.

“He’s already run statewide twice,” Wilson said. “He’s already got a lot of name ID.”

Scott has held off longer than his predecessor, former Gov. Charlie Crist, who announced in May 2009 that he would seek a U.S. Senate seat the following year.

But Crist also faced something Scott does not, so far: a credible primary challenger. In the 2010 U.S. Senate race, former state House Speaker Marco Rubio drummed Crist out of the Republican Party and then went on to win a three-way general election campaign.

For now, no other high-profile Republican has made serious noise about challenging Scott for the Senate nomination if he wants it.

“I don’t know that him announcing earlier is going to scare anyone off who’s not already scared off,” Jewett said.

Still, Wilson said, even Scott can’t wait forever.

“You have to put your toe in the water at some point,” he said, “or you attract other people into the game.”

by Brandon Larrabee, The News Service of Florida

Chattanooga Beats The Pensacola Blue Wahoos In 12 Innings

July 13, 2017

Pensacola Blue Wahoos manager Pat Kelly sees the positive side of his team’s matchup against the Chattanooga Lookouts.

The Blue Wahoos have taken three of the last five games from the Lookouts, although they lost Wednesday’s game, 5-3, in front of 4,423 at Blue Wahoos Stadium. In the three head-to-head series, Pensacola is 3-11 against Chattanooga, which is the first half North Division champions and own the best record in the Southern League.

“Every game we play against Chattanooga is like this,” Kelly said. “They seem to find the holes and we don’t. We can play head-to-head with them. We beat them three of the last five times.”

Pensacola left fielder Tyler Goeddel smoked a line drive over the left field wall to tie the score, 3-3, to lead off the seventh inning. It was his fifth homer of the season for the Blue Wahoos. Goeddel also played the hero in Tuesday’s game, drilling a bases-loaded double to left field to propel Pensacola over Chattanooga.

But the Lookouts scored two runs in the top of the 12th inning when DH Andy Wilkins hit a line drive double down the left field line to score shortstop Nick Gordon to put Chattanooga up, 4-3. First baseman Jonathan Rodriguez then scored on a sacrifice fly by Max Murphy that made it a 5-3 game.

Pensacola dropped to 1-6 in extra-inning games and are 10-10 in the second half. The South Division champions in the first half are 50-40 overall. Meanwhile, Chattanooga improved to 15-5 in the second half and 57-33 overall.

Chattanooga went up, 3-2, in the fifth inning on a controversial call. The Lookouts started a two-out rally when second baseman Alex Perez hit a double on a fly ball down the left field line that was ruled a fair ball. Perez then scored when Gordon, the Minnesota Twins top prospect, singled to center field with two outs. Lookouts left fielder LaMonte Wade, the Twins No. 12 prospect, then hit a soft liner to left field that drove in both catcher Dan Rohlfing and Gordon.

Kelly said the call changed the momentum of the game. He also expressed dissatisfaction that the No. 9 hitter batting .141 followed with a walk.

“It didn’t have to be a three-run inning,” Kelly said.

Pensacola right fielder Gabriel Guerrero lead off the fourth inning with a double off the left field wall and then scored on a chopper by catcher Chad Tromp to make the score, 2-0. Chattanooga third baseman T.J. White looked Guerrero back to the bag and then threw to second baseman Alex Perez for a force out. Perez saw Guerrero sprinting home and threw it on the mark but Guerrero slid wide of the plate for the run. Guerrero was 2-6 with two doubles off the wall in left center field for his team-leading 26th multi-hit game of the year.

Pensacola scored in the first inning to go ahead, 1-0, when third baseman Nick Senzel smacked a two-out grounder up the middle to extend his hitting streak to 12 games. First baseman Gavin LaValley earned a walk and then Blue Wahoos left fielder Nick Longhi blasted a single to center field that drove in Senzel from second base.

Senzel, the Cincinnati Reds top prospect, was 3-6 with a run scored and now has five multi-hit games this season. He is hitting .318 for Pensacola since being called up June 22 from the High-A Daytona Tortugas.

Chattanooga right-hander Felix Jorge was starting in his first game back with the Lookouts after making two starts with the Minnesota Twins. Jorge, the Twins eighth-ranked prospect, made his Major League debut July 1 and earned the win.

Against Pensacola, he worked six innings, giving up two runs, one earned on five hits and three walks, while striking out three. He is 8-1 on the season with a 3.14 ERA.

Pensacola had a chance to win its third straight game against Chattanooga in the eighth when it loaded the bases with one out against Lookout relievers Raul Fernandez and Todd Van Steensel. The Blue Wahoos loaded the bases when catcher Chad Tromp was hit in the head with an 84-mph breaking ball, knocking him flat on his back.

But Aristides Aquino came in to pinch hit after that and struck out and then Goeddel hit a chopper to third base that allowed the Lookout’s White to make the force out at second to end the scoring threat.

Kelly reported after the game that Tromp passed all the concussion tests but said he would probably hold him out of the next two or three games.

Alabama Triple Murder Suspect Commits Suicide At Navy Federal

July 12, 2017

Update - Alabama triple murder suspect Kenneth Dion Lever committed suicide Wednesday afternoon in a parking lot at Navy Federal Credit Union’s call center on West Nine Mile Road near I-10, according to the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office. He  took his own life after deputies caught up with him on Nine Mile Road. He pulled into a parking lot, got out of the car and shot himself.

“We have confirmation from the US Marshals Office in Escambia Co. FL that Kenneth Lever committed suicide,” Gardendale Police released.

Lever was awaiting trial on two Pennsylvania child sexual assault cases, including charges of corruption of a minor, indecent assault of a person less than 13 years old and deviate sexual intercourse with a child.

Previous story:

The hunt for a triple murder suspect from Alabama has extended into Escambia and Santa Rosa counties.

Three people — an adult male and two adult women — were found shot to death at a mobile home park in Gardendale, AL, just north of Birmingham. Police have said they believe the shooting to be domestic related,. The victims have been identified as Dana Reeves, 50, of Gardendale; Bonnie Reeves Foshee, 65, of Fultondale; and Don Austin Foshee, 69 of Fultondale.

The Gardendale Police Department has named 51-year old Kenneth Dion Lever, 51, as their suspect. He is described as being 5-foot, 10-inches tall, 220 pounds with blue eyes and brown hair. He was last seen wearing blue jeans and a camouflage t-shirt.

Authorities believe Lever could be headed to Escambia or Santa Rosa counties. He has lived in Santa Rosa County before — the Santa Rosa County Jail list an address on Lancaster Gate Drive in Pace as of an arrest there in 2015. Authorities also believe he has connections to an address in the Pensacola area.

Police believe he may be driving a 2017 red Nissan Sentra Georgia tag# RGC6858. An actual photo of the vehicle is at the top of the page.

Anyone with information on his whereabouts is asked to call 911.

Woman Charged With Attempted Murder After Hitting Deputy, Woman And House

July 12, 2017

An Escambia County woman has been charged with attempted murder after hitting a house, an Escambia County deputy and another woman Tuesday afternoon.

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office had responded  to another call on Wildflower Lane when 26-year old Star Perkins veered off the roadway and struck Deputy  Timyron Young and Brenda Gonzalez before hitting a house where debris struck Dickson Gonzalez who was walking to the front door. Her vehicle came to final rest with its front portion inside the house.  Perkins also struck a couple of parked vehicles.

Perkins was arrested Tuesday night by the Florida Highway Patrol and charged with attempted murder on a law enforcement officer, attempted murder, driving under the influence with serious bodily injury and driving under the influence with property damage. She was booked into the Escambia County Jail without bond.

Deputy Young was treated for a leg injury and is in serious condition, according to the Sheriff’s Office. Gonzalez was in critical condition.

Photos courtesy WEAR 3 for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

CSX: Return Of Gulf Coast Passenger Train Is Not Workable

July 12, 2017

A top CSX executive has told a Louisiana newspaper that the return of passenger rail service to the Gulf Coast — including cities like Atmore and Pensacola — is not workable due to federal on-time standards.

Amtrak’s Sunset Limited passenger train, which included service from New Orleans through Pensacola to Jacksonville along CSX tracks, came to an end along the Gulf Coast due to damage from Hurricane Katrina.

For the past couple of years, the Gulf Coast Rail Service Working Group, the Federal Rail Administration and the Southern Rail Commission have worked on studying the feasibility of the service return. The FRA is expected to soon report the findings to Congress.

The study included the roll of an Amtrak inspection train across the coast in early 2016, packed with Amtrak officials, local officials and VIPs and the media to gauge the reaction to the possible return of rail service to the Gulf Coast. The train arrived former Sunset Limited stops such as Mobile, Atmore and Pensacola with tremendous fanfare as local government have supported the service restoration.

At least 22 Gulf Coast mayors, including Pensacola Mayor Ashton Hayward and Atmore Mayor Jim Staff, provided letters of support calling for Congress to restore local passenger rail service.  The project is also supported by several regional transportation organizations, including the West Florida Regional Planning Council, the Florida-Alabama Transportation Planning Organization, the NW Florida Regional Transportation Planning Organization and the South Alabama Regional Planning Commission.

But not so fast, says David Dech, assistant vice president for passenger operations for CSX. In a letter to the New Orleans Times-Picayune, he said CSX has a genuine interest in the communities of the Gulf Coast, but new legal requirements now stand in the way of new Gulf Coast passenger rail service.

According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, the Sunset Limited rain on time only seven percent of the time in the year leading up to Katrina. But new federal regulations took effect in 2016 requiring that passenger trains run on schedule at least 80 percent of the time at each station.

And there’s no workaround, he said, because there are 17 drawbridge on the New Orleans to Florida route where priority is given to essential maritime traffic.

There is also a requirement effective in 2008 that requires passenger rail lines to be equipped with what’s know as a Positive Train Control (PTC) safety system.  There’s no proposal from the Gulf Coast Working Group for such a system on the Gulf Coast to prevent accidents such as train to train collisions and derailments from excessive speed. Instead, the group is seeking a waiver.

“CSX is proud to support safe, reliable passenger rail transportation. We also must keep faith with the traveling public, comply with the law and preserve our ability to serve area businesses by moving freight safely and reliably.  Two years of shared and committed study, including ideas that involve dramatic spending commitments, still have not yielded a single proposal that would come close to addressing these issues,” Dech wrote in his letter to Louisiana newspaper.

Pictured: An Amtrak inspection train rolls in Atmore (top and bottom) and Pensacola (inset) in February 2016. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

All Students At Many North Escambia Schools To Receive Free Lunch This Year

July 12, 2017

All students at many North Escambia schools will receive free breakfast and lunch this year, thanks to the expansion of a two-year old Escambia County School District program.

Bratt, Byrneville, Molino Park, Ernest Ward and Northview are among the  17 new schools added through the district’s participation in the Community Eligibility Provision (CEP).

Free breakfast and lunch will begin on the first day of school at the following locations in Escambia County (new schools are in bold):

Elementary Schools: Bellview Elementary, Bratt Elementary, Brentwood Elementary, C.A. Weis Elementary, Ensley Elementary, Ferry Pass Elementary, Global Learning Academy, Holm Elementary, Jim Allen Elementary, Lincoln Park Elementary, Lipscomb Elementary, Longleaf Elementary, McArthur Elementary, Molino Park Elementary, Montclair Elementary, Myrtle Grove Elementary, Navy Point Elementary, Oakcrest Elementary, Pine Meadow Elementary,  Pleasant Grove Elementary, Scenic Heights Elementary, O.J. Semmes Elementary, Sherwood Elementary, Warrington Elementary, and West Pensacola Elementary     

Middle Schools: Bellview Middle, Ernest Ward Middle, Ferry Pass Middle, Jim Bailey Middle, Warrington Middle, Woodham Middle, and Workman Middle       

High Schools: Escambia High School, Northview High School, Pensacola High School, Pine Forest High School, Booker T. Washington High School

Special Centers: Camelot, Lakeview Center, Judy Andrews, McMillian PreK Center, and Escambia Westgate Center  

Alternative Education/Charters: Byrneville Charter, Capstone, Escambia Charter, and Jacqueline Harris Preparatory Academy  

Vocational School: George Stone Technical (Phoenix Initiative Program)

Parents of the students at these schools are not required to submit an application for the free and reduced Lunch program at that school — all meals are free.

Families with students attending other ECSD schools are encouraged to apply for the National School Lunch and Breakfast Program. Applications will be sent home or parents and guardians to complete and return to their student’s school.

Pictured top: Sweet potatoes, mixed vegetables and crackers on the lunch menu at Jim Allen Elementary School. Pictured below: Lunch at Bratt Elementary and Ransom Middle School. Courtesy photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

More Afternoon Showers

July 12, 2017

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

Wednesday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 90. Calm wind becoming southeast around 5 mph in the afternoon.

Wednesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 73. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.

Thursday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 1pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 91. Calm wind becoming east around 5 mph in the afternoon.

Thursday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 74. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.

Friday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 92. Calm wind becoming east around 5 mph in the afternoon.

Friday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 74. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm.

Saturday: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 91. Calm wind becoming southeast around 5 mph in the afternoon.

Saturday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 74. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.

Sunday: Showers and thunderstorms likely. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 90. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Sunday Night: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 73.

Monday: Showers and thunderstorms likely. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 88. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Monday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 73.

Tuesday: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 88.

Flomaton Welcomes Home Teen Fireworks Accident Victim

July 12, 2017

Residents of Flomaton came together Tuesday night to welcome home a fellow resident, firefighter, classmate and friend that endured a tragic accident on the Fourth of July.

Hunter White, who turns 17 on Thursday, suffered major injuries to his right hand during an explosion as fireworks were being lit. He was taken to the hospital in Brewton and then airlifted to the regional burn center at the University of South Alabama Medical Center in Mobile. He was released from the hospital Tuesday.

White received a big welcome home back in Flomaton, with last-mile ride to house in a Flomaton fire truck with a police escort. White is a junior member of the Flomaton Fire Department.

The Flomaton High senior received a warm welcome at home from about 100 people.

Submitted photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Voters Remain Concerned As Data Request Put On Hold

July 12, 2017

Local elections officials are trying to talk voters out of unregistering, as privacy concerns continue to mount in response to a special commission created by President Donald Trump.

Fears about data breaches and identity theft — or flat-out aversion to what many perceive as a Big Brother-ish information gathering activity — continued even as a representative of the commission on Monday told state officials not to provide the voter data previously requested.

Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner was among the state officials who received the missive from Andrew Kossack, the designated federal officer for the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity.

Kossack advised Detzner and others to ignore the committee’s request for voter data — including dates of birth, party affiliation, and the last four digits of Social Security numbers — because of a lawsuit filed by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, or EPIC. The lawsuit, among other things, asked a judge for a temporary restraining order.

“Until the judge rules on the TRO, we request that you hold on submitting any data. We will follow up with you with further instructions once the judge issues her ruling,” Kossack, said in the email to state officials Monday.

The EPIC lawsuit is one of several, including cases filed by the American Civil Liberties Union and the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, asking courts to block states from providing the requested information or accusing the White House commission of operating in violation of federal government-in-the-sunshine laws.

Trump created the commission to investigate possible election fraud in last year’s election. The president has maintained that up to 5 million fraudulent votes were cast, but elections officials say fraud is rare and there was no evidence of widespread fraud in the 2016 contest.

Detzner spokeswoman Sarah Revell said Tuesday that the Florida secretary of state has not provided any information to the commission and had no plans to offer the data, in light of Monday’s email.

“The commission that made the public-records request asked the department not to submit the requested information. As with any public-records request, if the requester indicates they no longer wish to receive the information, we do not process their request,” Revell said in an email Tuesday when asked about Kossack’s message.

Detzner had already pledged to release to the commission only voter information that was publicly available.

But concerns about privacy have dogged the commission since its inception, and voters may not be assuaged by a court-induced hiatus in the request for data.

“I often feel it’s part of my job to be a cheerleader for participating in our democracy, by registering to vote and voting. Lately, my job has been to sell voters on not leaving the voting rolls,” Pasco County Supervisor of Elections Brian Corley told The News Service of Florida in a telephone interview Tuesday.

In the aftermath of news about the commission, Corley said his office has fielded about 50 phone calls from voters.

“Voters are, number one, upset and angry that their information was going to be sent to this commission. And secondly, their eyes are being opened to exactly how much of their personal information is already publicly available,” Corley, a Republican, said.

Voters are telling elections officials they feel forced to choose between protecting their privacy and exercising their right to vote.

“Think about it. Someone is literally willing to cancel, to give up their right and privilege to vote is beyond sad. It’s pathetic,” Corley said.

Polk County Supervisor of Elections Lori Edwards agreed that the commission has highlighted what, for some voters, has been a growing concern.

“It’s been a big concern of mine because, on a regular basis, I deal with constituent voters who are very upset when their information is public,” said Edwards, who has spent 17 years as the county’s chief elections official.

While many voters were aware of the situation “long before the presidential commission,” Edwards said the recent focus on Trump’s efforts to gather voter data has made people even more upset.

Voters aren’t the only ones who are riled, however.

County elections officials like Corley are also ticked off.

Seminole County Supervisor of Elections Mike Ertel delivered what he called a “mini rant” on Twitter last week.

Ertel, a Republican who’s held the post since his appointment by Gov. Jeb Bush in 2005, tweeted Friday that he had spent “the past several days” trying to convince voters to remain registered.

“In my 12 years in office, I’ve never had to have this many of these conversations,” Ertel tweeted. “Please don’t let an action you disagree with have the effect of silencing your most powerful tool to change or affirm it: your vote.”

When asked how he responds to voters who want to quit, Corley echoed Ertel’s sentiments.

“I tell them, you may seem angry now, but more of a protest would be to stay registered, stay engaged and come out to the polls in 2018 and have your voice heard. That would be more productive,” Corley said.

by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida

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