One Injured In Highway 29 Rollover

December 2, 2018

One person was injured in a single vehicle rollover accident Saturday night.

The car came to a stop right-side up on Highway 29 south of Kingsfield Road. The driver’s injuries were not considered life threatening.

The Florida Highway Patrol is investigating.

Reader submitted photo by David Satterfield, click to enlarge.

Escambia Schools Winter Special Olympics Held At Tate High

December 2, 2018

The Special Olympic Winter Games were held Friday at Tate High School with athletes from across the Escambia County School District taking part.  Pictured above: The Special Olympic Winter Games at Tate High School. Pictured below. Athletes from Bratt Elementary and Ernest Ward Middle School that took part. Photos for North Escambia.com, click to enlarge.

Hurricane Season Ends With Memories Of Michael

December 2, 2018

For the third consecutive year, after a decade reprieve, Florida in 2018 was tested by the force of a massive hurricane.

The slightly above-average season, which began June 1 and was ending Friday, began early for Florida. Tropical Storm Alberto brought maximum sustained winds of 45 mph to North Florida in late May.

But for the Sunshine State and parts of the nation’s Southeast, the season will be remembered for the powerful and deadly Hurricane Michael, which made landfall Oct. 10 in the Panhandle and traveled into Southwest Georgia with major hurricane- force winds.

For a NorthEscambia.com Hurricane Michael photo gallery from Mexico Beach, click here.

Michael didn’t affect as large of an area in Florida as Hurricane Matthew, which ran up the East Coast in 2016, or Irma, which traveled the state from the Keys to Jacksonville in 2017.

But Michael’s impacts will be felt long after the restoration is considered complete.

Fifty days after the storm left parts of Northwest Florida in ruins and drew concerns about the fate of Tyndall Air Force Base, major recovery efforts are ongoing, while officials have yet to put final figures to the damages.

“It is still very early in the recovery process, and those numbers are not available yet,” Florida Division of Emergency Management spokesman Andrew Wilber said Thursday.

Here are some of the numbers and issues emerging from Michael and the 2018 season:

DEATHS

The state Division of Emergency Management put the death count from Michael was 43 as of Monday.

The deaths included at least eight attributed to storm surge, floodwaters or trees falling on homes. Also, five people died while clearing trees. There were also four deaths involving utility workers, with three struck in a single incident by a hit-and-run driver who was ultimately arrested on charges including three counts of vehicular homicide and felony DUI manslaughter.

The state’s death count also includes seniors who died in homes without power, a person who was using a generator near a window while sleeping and a Bay County death listed as “looting incident with police.”

INSURANCE CLAIMS

As of Nov. 16 — the latest numbers available — 125,356 insurance claims had been filed because of Michael, with total estimated insured losses at $3.43 billion.

By comparison, Irma resulted in more than 1 million claims and $11 billion in estimated insured losses, while hurricanes Matthew and Hermine in 2016 drew nearly 130,000 claims, with losses projected at $1.3 billion. Matthew did not make landfall in Florida but caused damage as it restored up the East Coast, while Hermine hit the Big Bend region.

Citizens Property Insurance spokesman Mike Peltier said Thursday the state-backed insurer remains strong, even with the impact of hurricanes over the past three seasons.

AGRICULTURE

The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services has estimated Michael’s crop and cattle damages, along with other agricultural impacts, at $1.49 billion.

The hardest-hit segment was the timber industry, accounting for about $1.3 billion in economic losses, while more than 1 million acres of cotton, nuts and vegetables, along with livestock operations, were damaged across 25 counties.

It remains unknown if a federal relief package will come out of Congress for the agriculture industry.

After Irma caused an estimated $2.5 billion in damages to Florida’s agriculture industry, state and federal lawmakers spent several months pursuing a disaster relief package. When signed by President Donald Trump in February, the package included a $340 million block grant exclusively for the Florida citrus industry,

HISTORICAL DATA

The season included 15 named storms and eight hurricanes, of which two were major hurricanes. It was slightly above average and more active than initially predicted.

Among the statistics of the season.

— Five named storms were recorded in the Atlantic between Sept. 1 and Sept. 12, matching the 1988 season for the most on record between those dates.

— Hurricane Florence dumped a record 35.95 inches in North Carolina, topping the 24.06 inches from Hurricane Floyd in 1999. Florence also dropped 23.63 inches in South Carolina, besting the 1995 mark set by Tropical Storm Jerry.

— Hurricane Michael, with maximums sustained winds of 155 mph, was the first recorded Category 4 storm to land in the Florida Panhandle.

— Michael’s landfall pressure of 919 millibars — a key measurement of intensity — was among the lowest in the continental U.S. The Labor Day Hurricane of 1935 hit 892 mb as it ran across the Florida Keys and up the state’s West Coast. Hurricane Camille hit Mississippi in 1969 at 900 mb.

LEGISLATIVE RESPONSE

After Irma, the House set up a select committee to focus on crafting new laws and procedures about hurricane preparations, evacuations and recovery.

Heading into the 2019 legislative session, a similar select committee isn’t expected, though Senate President Bill Galvano said this month that Michael will represent a $1 billion-plus challenge “that will impact our budgetary and policy decisions out of the gate.”

House and Senate leaders expect individual committees “will address issues related to the hurricane,” House spokesman Fred Piccolo said Thursday.

Galvano spokeswoman Katie Betta said Michael-related work can be accomplished by the existing committees. Galvano “continues to discuss these issues with the impacted lawmakers, and certainly they will play a key role in the Senate’s review of hurricane-related matters when the Senate resumes its committee work,” Betta said.

Committees will start meeting in December, with the legislative session starting in March.

by Jim Turner, The News Service of Florida

NorthEscambia.com photos.

Atmore YMCA Closes For Good

December 2, 2018

The Atmore YMCA quietly closed for the last time Friday afternoon after serving area residents for the past 23 years. Two full time and nine part-time employees are losing their jobs.

Fundraising and membership efforts were not enough to keep the facility open.

The facility announced a closure in 2014, but an influx of community funding kept the doors open. At last count the Y had over 600 members.

The YMCA will hold an “estate sale” on December 8 from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. and December 9 from noon until 4 p.m. to sell assets. Funds will be used to pay outstanding debts.

Slight Chance Of Showers Tonight

December 2, 2018

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:
Tonight: A slight chance of showers, then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 56. Calm wind becoming north around 5 mph after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Monday: A 30 percent chance of showers, mainly before noon. Partly sunny, with a high near 70. North wind around 5 mph.

Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 41. North wind around 5 mph.

Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 57. North wind 5 to 10 mph.

Tuesday Night: Clear, with a low around 33. North wind around 5 mph.

Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 52. North wind 5 to 10 mph.

Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 32. Northeast wind around 5 mph.

Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 56. Northeast wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the afternoon.

Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 39.

Friday: Partly sunny, with a high near 61.

Friday Night: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 50.

Saturday: Showers and possibly a thunderstorm. High near 65. Chance of precipitation is 80%.

Saturday Night: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 47.

Sunday: A slight chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a high near 54.

Jackie Coppenger

December 2, 2018

Jackie Coppenger, 77, of Milton, Florida went home to be with her Lord and Savior Sunday, November 25, 2018 at a local hospital surrounded by her loving family. Jackie was born July 31, 1941 in Atmore, Alabama to Clarence E. Smith and Helen Keller Smith Chiscoski.

Jackie lived in Pensacola, Florida most her life graduating from Pensacola High School in 1959. She married the love of her life, Jack Coppenger in Jacksonville, Florida in 1961. While there, she finished her degree in education at Jacksonville University. She and Jack moved back to Pensacola where she began her 30 year teaching career beginning and ending at Pine Meadow Elementary. She also taught at Longleaf Elementary, Bellview Elementary as well as schools in Hattiesburg, Mississippi and Sandersville, Georgia. Jackie loved using the “Little House on the Prairie” books to read to her class, usually after lunch, using the time to teach them about God’s provision and other valuable life lessons.

Jackie also wrote and composed several gospel songs that encouraged many people. She sang her songs and played the piano beautifully over the years. Jackie and her husband pastored several churches beginning at Pine Forest Misson/Chapel, where Jackie served the Lord playing the piano or leading the music. She also served in this capacity at Ridgeland Heights Baptist Church in Sandersville, Georgia. They were the founding pastors of Charity Chapel in Pensacola as well. She also had a great ministry at Pensacola Boys Base alongside of her husband, who was the Superintendent for seventeen years. They ministered to hundreds of troubled youth in the Pensacola area. Jackie will be remembered by many as having a heart of compassion to anyone she met, especially those with a need.

Jackie is preceded in death by her parents and her husband, Jack. She is survived by her three children: Jill (Bill) Hunt, Jennifer Coppenger-Ward, and Jack E. (Renee) Coppenger; her grandchildren: Bobby (Melissa) Wilson, Ricky (Stefani) Wilson, and Dillon Hunt; Hayden, Liam, and Isabella Ward; Jack R., Deborah, Abbey, Emma, Andrew, and Wesley Coppenger; great grandchildren Jaxson Wilson and Stella Wilson. She is also survived by her sisters: Joyce Seymour, Judy Sizemore and Noveta (Doug) Nellums and many nephews, nieces, cousins and extended family members and friends.

The family would like to say “thank you” to her niece Shannon N. McGhee for her caring attention and medical advice. She was a very calming influence at a very difficult time. Also, thank you to the trauma team at West Florida Hospital Emergency Room.

The visitation will be held at Faith Chapel North, 1000 S. Hwy 29, Cantonment, Florida, on Monday, December 3, 2018 from 9:30 – 11:30 A.M. with the service beginning at 11:30 A.M. Former Pastor and family friend, Richard “Chip” Fox and son, Jack E. Coppenger will be officiating. Interment will be at Pensacola Memorial Gardens.

Pallbearers will be Bobby Wilson, Ricky Wilson, Jack R. Coppenger, Liam Ward, Dillon Hunt, Bill Hunt, Craig Seymour, Mark Seymour, Daniel Heyse & Michael Roberts.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Gideons International, where Bibles can be designated in Jackie’s memory. Faith Chapel North is entrusted with all arrangements.

Florida Gov’t Weekly Roundup: Change Is In The Air

December 2, 2018

As one former high-ranking state official confided not long ago, “You don’t want to be the last can on the shelf.”

So the musical chairs now underway on the plaza level in the Capitol come as no surprise, with the advent of a newly minted governor and two fresh Cabinet members preparing to take office in early January.

While many long-time aides have been jumping ship for months, other current and wannabe staffers are brushing up their curriculum vitae in the hopes of joining the nascent administrations of Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis, incoming Attorney General Ashley Moody or Agriculture Commissioner-to-be Nikki Fried, the only Democrat to win a statewide election this year.

http://www.northescambia.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/floridaweeklly.jpgPerhaps those who already work for Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, who was appointed last year by Gov. Rick Scott, are breathing a sigh of relief after their boss handily held onto his Cabinet post in the Nov. 6 election.

While the dance known inside the Tallahassee beltway as the “agency-head shuffle” begins, DeSantis this week tapped a face familiar to many capital insiders to serve as his consigliere, as the line encircling the governor’s inner sanctum is drawn.

Meanwhile, one of DeSantis’ first high-profile tasks came under scrutiny, after the panel responsible for choosing Supreme Court nominees didn’t include an African-American in its list of selections to fill three upcoming vacancies. It will result in the first time in more than three decades the state’s highest court won’t include a black justice.

While the governor-elect measures the drapes and the résumés flood in, folks with deep pockets are gearing up for the revelry known as the inauguration. The ceremonial swearing-in will likely be overshadowed by the pomp-and-circumstance surrounding what could be a multi-day affair, capped by balls that provide an opportunity for well-heeled insiders to show off their gems, tuxedos and furs, if Tallahassee weather holds.

Which brings to mind a snippet overheard at former Gov. Jeb Bush’s inaugural festivities, which took place amid a bone-chilling North Florida cold snap in 1999. Bush took office after Republicans had been shut out of 700 North Adams Street for nearly a decade.

“Isn’t it wonderful to see so many furs?” drawled one white-haired doyenne to a friend, as the women left the Bush’s outdoor inaugural ceremony.

Her companion agreed: “It’s great to have Republicans back in power.”

DUCK, DUCK, GOOSE

In the first of his high-profile administration hires, DeSantis kicked off the week by tapping Shane Strum, a Broward County Republican who’s worked for two other governors, to serve as his chief of staff.

Strum, who will begin in the post when DeSantis takes over as governor on Jan. 8, currently is an executive at Hollywood-based Memorial Healthcare System.

“I am very pleased to announce that Shane is returning to public service and bringing his expertise to our administration,” DeSantis said in a statement. “Having spent many years in both the private and public sector, and previously serving two Florida governors, Shane will be a great addition to our team.”

Strum also worked for former Gov. Charlie Crist, capping his tenure as chief of staff during Crist’s final two years as governor. Strum also was an adviser to Scott’s transition team following Scott’s election in 2010.

Heralded by supporters as a competent and loyal strategist, Strum also brings a strength as a relationship-builder to the new governor’s inner circle. DeSantis, a former congressman, was a virtual unknown to most state lawmakers until his primary-election victory over Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam in August.

“The first chief of staff for a new governor, or a governor who is coming to Tallahassee with a fresh start or a fresh face, you need somebody who’s a steady hand. You need somebody who’s loyal, who’s going to be driving your agenda. And there’s nobody better for taking the reins of the executive office of the governor and doing it in a way that’s going to have Gov. DeSantis be positioned to succeed,” Everglades Foundation CEO Eric Eikenberg, who was Strum’s boss and preceded him as Crist’s chief of staff, told The News Service of Florida.

A ‘COMPLETE REVERSAL?’

For the first time in 36 years, the Florida Supreme Court will not have an African-American member when three new justices join the court early next year.

DeSantis will select the new justices from a list of 11 nominees sent to him Tuesday by the Florida Supreme Court Judicial Nominating Commission. None of the nine judges and two lawyers on the nominee list is black, although six of the original 59 applicants were African-Americans.

That means when Justice Peggy Quince’s term ends on Jan. 8, it will mark the first time since January 1983, when the late Justice Leander Shaw joined the court, that the Supreme Court will not have a black member.

DeSantis will select the three justices to fill vacancies left by Quince and justices Barbara Pariente and R. Fred Lewis, who are leaving the court because they have reached a mandatory retirement age.

The looming absence of a black justice on the highest court in the nation’s third-largest state, which has more than 3.5 million African-American residents, drew sharp criticism from prominent black lawyers, a former African-American justice, black state lawmakers and the NAACP.

“It’s not a good day for the judiciary of the state of Florida when you’re going to look up there (at the Supreme Court bench) and not see anybody who is black after 36 years,” said former state Sen. Arthenia Joyner, a Tampa lawyer and longtime civil- rights leader. “What message are we sending to our kids? That it’s a complete reversal of going back to the days of segregation?”

Joyner, a Democrat, put the blame on Scott, who has appointed all the members of the judicial nominating commissions that develop the appointment lists for state appellate and trial courts. She said Scott has filled the nominating commissions with members who advance judges who are “clones” of the conservative Republican governor.

McKinley Lewis, a spokesman for Scott, said the governor must appoint judges based on the nominees offered by the judicial nominating commissions.

“Our office does not control who applies to become a judge or what applicants are sent to the governor for consideration,” Lewis said.

The DeSantis transition team on Thursday referred to a statement released by the governor-elect on Tuesday when the nominations were announced. DeSantis called the nominees a group of “talented and highly qualified individuals.”

“Gov. Scott leaves behind an outstanding legacy of strong judicial appointments while in office,” DeSantis said in the statement. He said he would rely on Scott’s counsel as he evaluates the nominees and will select three justices who “will respect our Constitution and the rule of law and serve our state with distinction.”

But retired Supreme Court Justice James E.C. Perry, who was appointed by Crist and served nearly eight years on the court, said a court without a black justice “is an indication of where we are” both as a state and as a country.

“I’m appalled. But not surprised,” Perry, who is black, told The News Service of Florida. “Obviously, we’re retrogressing instead of progressing.”

Perry pointed to anti-immigrant policies such as the proposed construction of a wall along the Mexican-U.S. border, an idea espoused by President Donald Trump, whose strong support of DeSantis helped boost the governor-elect to a Republican primary victory in August.

“We’re talking about building a wall. We need to build a mirror, so we can look in the mirror. The message is clear. There wasn’t even an African-American who made the short list,” Perry said.

STORY OF THE WEEK: Florida’s highest court will not have an African-American justice for the first time in 36 years, after a panel responsible for selecting judicial nominees did not include a black nominee in a list of 11 names to succeed three retiring justices.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: — “This does not bode well for Florida, especially with the divisiveness that exists in this country right now.” — Former Sen. Arthenia Joyner, a lawyer and veteran civil rights activist, speaking about the upcoming lack of a black justice on the Florida Supreme Court.

by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida

Angela Marie Hawthorne (DeVries)

December 2, 2018

Angela Marie Hawthorne (DeVries), 48, of Bay Minette, Alabama passed Monday, November 26, 2018. Raised in Cantonment, she was an avid adventurer and outdoors woman, with great skills in the kitchen. She served her community as a Postal Carrier for the last eight years in Cantonment.

She was preceded in death by her grandfather, Curtis Sapp; grandmother Ollie Sapp and father Paul DeVries.
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She is survived by her husband, Chris Hawthorne; Mother Helen Harlow, brother Tim DeVries; daughter Brianne Freund; son, Robert Freund; step daughters, Leslie Freund and Sarahann Hawthorne; grandchildren Kyndall Kelley, Harlom Poole, Mikel Freund and Brooklyn Freund. The family suggests donations be made to Chris Hawthorne.Faith Chapel Funeral Home North, 1000 Hwy. 29 South, Cantonment, FL entrusted with arrangements.

Escambia Man Gets 25 Years For Molesting Two Children

December 2, 2018

An Escambia County man has been been sentenced to prison for child molestation.

William Thomas Wells, 35, entered a plea to five counts of lewd or lascivious molestation on a victim under 12, and  two counts of possession of child pornography. Circuit Judge Joel Boles sentenced the defendant to 25 years state prison as a minimum mandatory sentence followed by lifetime sex offender probation. Wells was also designated as a sexual predator.

In May of 2017, a 7-year old and a 9-year old disclosed that Wells had sexually abused them.

Verla Mae Wheeler

December 2, 2018

Verla Mae Wheeler, born April 7, 1923 in Luverne, Alabama to Lawrence and Stella Barrow. Preceded in death by her loving husband of seventy-one years, Clinton Wheeler and her oldest son, C.J. Wheeler. A loving mother and grandmother.

Survived by three children, Lamar Wheeler (Marie), Charlene Richardson (Joe), and Tim Wheeler (Nancy), eleven grandchildren, twenty-four great-grandchild, and two great-great-grandchildren.  A woman who audaciously loved her Lord and Savior, Jesus. A prayer warrior who lived with verve and gratitude for her family and friends.  Verla instilled the values of prayer in the lives of her family. Full of grace, she opened her home to all family and friends where they could find a home cooked meal. She took great pride in her home, where she would spend her days outdoors enjoying her passions of gardening, fishing, and taking care of her animals. As she enters the gates of heaven, she will be greatly missed by everyone.

isitation will be held on Sunday, December 2, 2018, from 1:00 – 2:00 PM, at Faith Chapel Funeral Home North.  Funeral Services will follow at 2:00 PM.  Interment will be at Cottage Hill Assembly of God Cemetery.

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