Jimmy L. Calhoun

March 29, 2018

Mr. Jimmy L Calhoun (Jim) died after succumbing to ALS in his home on March 28, 2018, in Cantonment, Florida at the age of 75.

Jim is survived by his wife of 55 years, Nan Calhoun, who nurtured and protected him during his illness. He is also survived by his children, Gregory Calhoun (Derenda) of Panama City Beach, FL, Suzy McCann (Keith) of Cantonment FL; grandchildren, Nicole Calhoun, Peyton Calhoun and Patrick McHaney; siblings, Betty Sue Rogers of Elba, AL, and Larry Calhoun of Pensacola, FL.

He is preceded in death by his parents, George and Gladys Calhoun; brother, Jerry Calhoun and sister, Judy Ann Thomas.

Jim was born on August 15, 1942, in Coffee County, Alabama where he met and married the love of his life, Nan, in 1962. After moving to Pensacola, Jim devoted 33 years to Layne Central Company where he served as field superintendent overseeing construction and development of municipal water well systems throughout the southeast. Jim would subsequently take his same work ethic to Griener Drilling for another 19 years where he served as a water well contractor and mentor.

Jim and Nan were members of Gonzalez Baptist Church before moving their membership to Olive Baptist Church where Jim adored his Sunday school class (The Raymond Oliver Sunday School Class). This group became his dear friends and he so looked forward to their company. Jim also had several other close friends he thought of as family. Family was his heart. He dearly loved his wife, children, and was particularly smitten by all three of his grandchildren. Quite simply, Jim was a steady foundation and safe refuge for his entire family. He will be sorely missed.

Jim’s funeral is scheduled for Saturday, March 31, 2018, at 10 a.m. at Faith Chapel Funeral Home North.

The family will receive visitors on Friday, March 30, 2018, from 5 p.m. until 7 p.m. and again at 9 a.m. on Saturday, March 31, 2018, at the funeral home.

Jim will be laid to rest at Evergreen Cemetery in Elba, Alabama, Saturday, March 31, 2018, at 3 p.m.  Pastor Jerry Passmore will officiate the ceremony. All are welcome to attend and celebrate Jim’s life.

The family would like to thank caregivers, hospital staff, etc. for their efforts, care, and dedication.

Pallbearers will be John Brinkman, Jeremy Brown, Chris Hatch, Andy Armstrong, Larry Kinley, and Jeff Smart.

Honorary pallbearers will be The Raymond Oliver Sunday School Class.

Faith Chapel Funeral Home North is entrusted with the arrangements.

Cantonment Pedestrian Hit And Killed On East Kingsfield Road

March 28, 2018

A pedestrian was hit and killed Tuesday night on East Kingsfield Road near Majestic Drive.

Jason Strother, age 34 of Cantonment, was walking eastbound on East Kingsfileld was he was struck by a 2003 Dodge Charger driven by 41-year old Patrick Bell of Cantonment about 9:15 p.m., according to the Florida Highway Patrol.

Strother was pronounced deceased at the scene; Bell was not injured.

Any charges in the crash are pending the outcome of a traffic homicide investigation, according to the FHP.

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

ECSO: Cantonment Man Involved As Guns Sold To Undercover Cops At Carver Park

March 28, 2018

A Cantonment man was arrested recently on weapons charges.

In March 2017, Anthony Purifoy was allegedly involved in the sale of  two firearms to undercover officers at Carver Park on Webb Street in Cantonment, according to an arrest report.

Investigators from the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office Gun Crimes Response Team and ATF reported purchasing a Hi-Point 9mm and a Mossberg .22 caliber semiautomatic rifle for $850 in cash. A records check after the transaction did not indicate the guns were stolen.

A warrant was issued for Purifoy’s arrest. As deputies attempted to apprehend him recently, he ran from a house on Robinson Street and refused to stop, the report states. As he ran across Robinson street, he was apprehended by an Escambia County Sheriff’s Office K-9.

Purifoy was transported by Escambia County EMS to Baptist Hospital for treatment of his injuries.

Purify was arrested on two counts of possession of a weapon by a convicted felon and resist officer without violence.  He remained in the Escambia County Jail without bond.

Bratt Elementary Names Students Of The Month

March 28, 2018

The following students were named Students of the Month for March at Bratt Elementary School.

Pre-K
Ariel Alexander
Patton Amos
Kindergarten
Riverly Heathcock
Abigail Hawthorne
Mason Garvin
Tikiya Syria
Aric Rolin

First Grade
Maybree Johnson
Layla Pettway
Briley Moore
Addison Carpenter

Second Grade
Jackson Salter
Isabella Sanspree
Anthoney Johnson
Bryson Odom

Third Grade
Kaylee Long
Lori Hall
John Griffs

Fourth Grade
Ora Bryan
Nevaeh Bush
Kenslee Chavira
Talaysha Curry

Fifth Grade
Cole Hughes
Jayla Brown
JayCee Vernon
Arieyana Johnson

Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Judge Orders New System Of Restoring Felon Rights

March 28, 2018

A federal judge permanently blocked Florida’s “fatally flawed” process of restoring voting rights, giving Gov. Rick Scott and the Board of Executive Clemency a month to come up with a new system of providing ex-felons the right to vote.

In Tuesday’s order, U.S. District Judge Mark Walker repeatedly chided Scott and the state clemency board — comprised of Scott, Attorney General Pam Bondi, state Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis and Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam — for the current restoration process and for threatening to scrap the system altogether after the judge last month struck down the process as unconstitutional.

Walker, siding with the voting-rights group Fair Elections Legal Network, last month found that the state’s clemency system is arbitrary and violated First Amendment rights and equal-protection rights under the U.S. Constitution’s 14th Amendment.

In his Feb. 1 order, Walker asked both sides to propose a new method to restore voting rights to ex-felons, who now must wait five or seven years after their sentences are complete to apply to have their rights restored in a process Walker said gives “unfettered discretion” to the board.

In a brief filed last month, attorneys for the state argued that Florida could permanently do away with the restoration of civil rights, sparking a rebuke from Walker in Tuesday’s order.

“This court is not the Vote-Restoration Czar. It does not pick and choose who may receive the right to vote and who may not,” Walker began Tuesday’s 22-page order.

Walker accused the state of choosing to “essentially repackage the current scheme” that would allow Scott and the clemency board “to do, as the governor described, ‘whatever we want’ in denying voting rights to hundreds of thousands of their constituents.”

“This will not do,” Walker wrote.

On the other side, the plaintiffs asked Walker to restore the right to vote to former felons who had completed their sentences and had already gone through a five- or seven-year waiting period.

“But such relief is beyond the scope of this court’s authority,” Walker wrote, adding that “any perceived policy weaknesses” regarding the restoration of voting rights can be cured through ballot initiatives or legislative acts.

While Walker did not lay out a new process or establish new time limits, the judge ordered the board to move forward with time constraints “that are meaningful, specific, and expeditious.”

“Absent extraordinary circumstances, this court cannot conceive of any reason why an applicant at any point must wait more than one election cycle after she becomes eligible to apply for restoration,” the judge wrote.

Scott was instrumental in establishing the more onerous restoration-of-rights process almost immediately after he took office in 2011.

Scott spokesman John Tupps said Tuesday it is up to “officials elected by Floridians, not judges … to determine Florida’s clemency process for convicted felons.”

“This is outlined in Florida’s Constitution and has been in place for more than a century and under multiple gubernatorial administrations,” Tupps said in a statement. “The governor continues to stand with victims of crime. He believes that people who have been convicted of felony offenses including crimes like murder, violence against children and domestic violence, should demonstrate that they can live a life free of crime while being accountable to our communities.”

Walker’s order found that the restoration-of-rights portion of Florida’s Constitution, along with the executive clemency rights-restoration process, run afoul of the U.S. Constitution.

Relying on a footnoted quote from legendary screen character Rocky Balboa, Walker mocked the defendants, writing that they claimed “the current scheme is all sunshine and rainbows.”

And Walker invoked history as a lesson in the significance of “free association and free expression to choose public officials” to represent people and advance public policy.

“These interests are why Americans launched a revolution against perceived unfettered discretion in the hands of one high-ranking official, King George III,” Walker wrote.

Walker also cautioned that there is a risk that the clemency board “may engage in viewpoint discrimination through seemingly neutral rationales” such as traffic citations or a “perceived lack of remorse” that “serve as impermissible” masks for censorship.

“Therefore, the board must promulgate specific standards and neutral criteria to direct its decision-making,” Walker ordered.

The standards and criteria “cannot be merely advisory, a Potemkin village for anyone closely reviewing the scheme,” the judge elaborated, instructing the board not to rely “on whims, passing emotions or perceptions.”

“Establishing safeguards against viewpoint discrimination should be the board’s paramount goal following this order,” Walker instructed.

Scott and the clemency board “balk at injunctive relief” partly because of “a presumption of regularity,” Walker wrote.

“This argument boils down to ‘trust us — we got this,’ ” he wrote.

Walker also took note of “problems of potential abuse,” especially when clemency board members — who are statewide elected officials and who may be running for re-election or another office — “have a personal stake in shaping the electorate to their perceived benefit.”

“Speech is an essential mechanism of democracy, for it is the means to hold officials accountable to the people,” Walker wrote, quoting from a seminal U.S. Supreme Court decision in a case known as Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission.

“Florida’s current scheme inverts that important democratic mechanism. It cannot do so anymore,” the judge wrote.

Walker ordered the clemency board to devise a constitutionally sound program with “specific, neutral criteria that excise the risk — and, of course, the actual practice of — any impermissible discrimination, such as race, gender, religion or viewpoint.”

Walker did not specify any particular process or criteria, but ordered that “Florida’s corrected scheme cannot be byzantine or burdensome.”

Walker also rejected arguments that the clemency board can’t handle what could be hundreds of thousands of applications for rights restoration.

“It is no excuse that the board lacks resources to abide by the federal Constitution’s requirements. If the board pursues policies that sever hundreds of thousands of Floridians from the franchise and, at the appropriate time, hundreds of thousands of Floridians want their voting rights back, the board must shoulder the burden of its policies’ consequences,” Walker wrote. “They cannot continue to shrug off restoration applications indefinitely.”

Walker also chastised Scott and the board for threatening to put an end to the rights-restoration process.

Even though he found that the state’s “arbitrary slow drip” of restoring rights violates the U.S. Constitution, “that does not mean defendants can shut off the spigot of voting rights with a wrench, yank it from the plumbing, and throw the whole apparatus into the Gulf of Mexico,” Walker wrote.

“Having lost their ability to re-enfranchise citizens at a snail’s pace guided by absolutely nothing, Defendants threats to arbitrarily and completely end the vote-restoration scheme is tantamount to picking up one’s marbles and going home,” he scolded.

by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida

Free Beans And Rice Giveaway Saturday In Cantonment

March 28, 2018

Saint Monica’s Episcopal Church, will be distributing free rice and dried beans and other non-perishables on Saturday, March 31 from 9 until 11 a.m. (or while supplies last) at the church located at 699 South Hwy 95-A in Cantonment.

There are no guidelines and no paperwork required.

Partly Sunny Today, Rain For Thursday

March 28, 2018

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

Wednesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 79. South wind 5 to 10 mph increasing to 10 to 15 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 20 mph.

Wednesday Night: Patchy fog after 4am. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a low around 64. South wind around 10 mph.

Thursday: A chance of showers before 10am, then a chance of showers and thunderstorms between 10am and 1pm, then showers and possibly a thunderstorm after 1pm. Patchy fog before 8am. High near 77. South wind 10 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%.

Thursday Night: Showers and possibly a thunderstorm. Low around 58. South wind 5 to 10 mph becoming light and variable in the evening. Chance of precipitation is 80%.

Friday: A 20 percent chance of showers before 1pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 73. North wind 5 to 10 mph.

Friday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 49. North wind around 5 mph.

Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 75. Northeast wind around 5 mph becoming south in the afternoon.

Saturday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 51. South wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 78.

Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 58.

Monday: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly sunny, with a high near 78.

Monday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 58.

Tuesday: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 76.

Florida Superintendents Say Money May Not Cover Resource Officers

March 28, 2018

A new report from Florida’s school superintendents warns that despite a nearly $100 million increase in funding, there may not be enough money to post an armed school resource officer at each school in the state.

In reacting to the shooting deaths of 17 students and staff members at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 14, the Legislature passed a new budget and related bills that boosted funding for resource officers by $97.5 million to $162 million in the upcoming academic year.

But a report from the Florida Association of District School Superintendents said school districts might not be able to meet the goal of posting at least one safety officer at each of Florida’s more than 3,500 elementary, middle and high schools. The report was part of a State Board of Education agenda for a meeting Tuesday in LaBelle but was not discussed.

“We appreciate the legislative appropriations, but many districts will have difficulty meeting the requirement to establish or assign one (or) more safe-school officers at each school facility,” the report said.

The superintendents also said a lack of funding for law-enforcement officers may put pressure on districts to use the “Coach Aaron Feis Guardian Program,” which would allow school employees, including some teachers, to bring guns to school if they are specially trained and deputized by sheriffs.

But noting the opposition to the guardian program in many districts and communities, the superintendents said much of the $67 million for that initiative may go unspent. They asked the Board of Education for support in shifting some of those funds to the school resource officer program.

“Superintendents request that you support and recommend that these unspent dollars be used in districts for additional school resource officers or other school safety measures,” the report said.

In a recent interview with The News Service of Florida, Senate President Joe Negron, R-Stuart, said lawmakers may considering using the Joint Legislative Budget Commission to shift some of the guardian funds into other safety measures if the money goes unspent, although it was too early to make that determination.

The superintendents also raised concerns about a provision in the new school-safety law that will require “active shooter” and “hostage situations” drills in the schools.

“Superintendents support these drills, but they must be accomplished with minimal disruption to teaching and learning and in a manner that does not unnecessarily frighten students, particularly elementary students,” the report said.

The superintendents said they would work with the Department of Education on other school-safety initiatives, including establishing a state Safe Schools Office, developing a school security-risk assessment tool and implementing the guardian program.

The report also offered some recommendations on implementing a new $69 million mental-health services program, which has been a top priority for the school superintendents for some time.

But the report warned that some school districts could face budget cuts in the coming year because the bulk of increased spending in the new education budget is targeted toward the school safety and mental health issues in the wake of the Broward County shooting.

The superintendents noted that the “base student allocation,” the primary source for general operational activities, only increased by 47 cents per student statewide, a fraction of the overall funding increase of $101.50 per student.

“With only a 47-cent increase in the BSA, superintendents will be forced to cut their budgets — cuts that will impact students, schools and communities that are served,” the report said.

by Lloyd Dunkelberger, The News Service of Florida

Pine Forest Shuts Out Northview; Tate Beats Miami Beach

March 28, 2018

Tate 2, Miami Beach 1

The Tate Aggies beat Miami Beach High School 2-1 Tuesday.

Cole Fryman earned the victory on the pitcher’s mound for the Aggies. He allowed just one run on four hits, walking one and striking out one.

For Tate: Blake Anderson 1-2; Ryan Green 1-3, R; Reid Halfacre 1-3, RBI; Trent Jeffcoat 1-2; Raymond Lafleur 1-3; Hunter Riggan 1-2, R; Jesse Sherill 1-3, R.

Pine Forest 11, Northview 0

The Pine Forest Eagles defeated the Northview Chiefs Tuesday afternoon at Pine Forest.

After a scoreless first inning, the 6A Eagles exploded with nine runs and sealed the win in just three innings with two runs in the bottom of the third to invoke the 10-run rule.

Singleton took the loss for the 1A Chiefs surrendering 11 runs on 12 hits while striking out two.  Nolan Rigby earned the win for Pine Forest with no run, three hits and striking out two.

For Northview: Seth Killam 1-3; Trevor Singleton 1-3; John Chivington 1-3; Jason Fischer 1-2.

For Pine Forest: John Pinette 1-4, R; Kyler Hultgren 1-2, 2R; Jason Roberts 3-3, R, 2RBI; Nolan Rigby 2-3, 2R, RBI; Garrett Holmes 1-3, R, RBI; Timmy Williams 3-3, 2R, RBI; Christian Munoz 1-2, RBI; Wyatt Gill 1-3, R, RBI; Ladarius Clardy 1-3, R, RBI.

Pine Forest will host South Warren of Bowling Green, KY, on April 2 at 7 p.m. The Chiefs will travel to Jay on April 3 at 6:30 p.m.

It’s Weed Appreciation Day In Florida

March 28, 2018

A new plant pops up in your yard — is it a weed? It’s all in the eye of the beholder, says a lawn and garden expert with the University of Florida.

“A weed is simply a plant growing out of place,” said Wendy Wilber, state Master Gardener coordinator for UF’s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences.

What we might consider a weed in the garden might be a welcomed sight elsewhere, a fact worth recognizing on Weed Appreciation Day, March 28.

“There are a lot of beautiful weeds—we call them wildflowers or native plants. A wildflower growing on the side of the road is very much appreciated. We know they attract pollinators and are good for the ecosystem,” Wilber said.

Weeds’ resilience can also earn our begrudging respect.

“Weeds sometimes will surprise you,” Wilber said. “They’ll show up in a sidewalk crack or the middle of a parking lot. Sometimes we have to admire the weeds for their persistence.”

But if weeds are causing problems for desired plants in the landscape, there are ways to prevent them.

Common weeds in Florida turfgrass include yellow woodsorrel, dollar weed, dichondra, crabgrass, nutsedge, and the spurges. “They often move into a turf that’s unhealthy or has gaps in it. Weed seeds will find a place to germinate in the sparse areas of the lawn,” Wilber explained. “One of the ways we can prevent weeds is by growing a healthy, dense turf the weed seeds can’t fall into and germinate.”

If you just have a few weeds here and there, pull or mow them before they’ve gone to flower to help prevent the seeding of new weeds, she said. If weeds are more prevalent, you may need to apply an herbicide spot treatment. Always read the label and apply treatments correctly, she said.

If you’re just not sure what to do about an unfamiliar plant that’s sprung up in your landscape, call on a local expert. There are more than 4,000 Master Gardener volunteers in the state of Florida, and they are ready to help, Wilber said.

“The Master Gardeners are a corps of volunteers that spreads horticultural information from the University of Florida IFAS Extension. The Master Gardeners are a wealth of knowledge about all kinds of things going on in your lawn, landscape and vegetable garden. You can come to them with practical questions and get practical answers. They are going to help you make your landscape more Florida-friendly and more enjoyable,” she said.

For more information about the Master Gardener program in Escambia County, contact Beth Bolles at (850) 475-5230 or email shendrix@ufl.edu.

Courtesy photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

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