Florida’s Back To School Sales Tax Holiday Continues

August 7, 2021

Florida’s 10-day back to school sales tax holiday continues through Monday August 9.

During the sales tax holiday period, qualifying items will be exempt from tax, including certain school supplies selling for $15 or less per item; clothing, footwear, and certain accessories selling for $60 or less per item; and the first $1,000 of the sales price of personal computers and certain computer-related accessories purchased for noncommercial home or personal use.

For complete details from the Florida Department of Revenue, click or tap here.

Here Are The School Supply Lists For Escambia County Schools

August 7, 2021

Here are the school supply lists for Escambia County.

Florida’s sales tax holiday is continuing through August 9. Most school supplies and clothing are tax exempt, including certain school supplies selling for $15 or less per item; clothing, footwear, and certain accessories selling for $60 or less per item; and the first $1,000 of the sales price of personal computers and certain computer-related accessories purchased for noncommercial home or personal use.

For a printable elementary school list, click here.

For a printable middle school list, click here.

All elementary and middle schools in Escambia County have the same core supply list, including some optional items. Additional wish list items may listed on individual school or PTA sites, including social media. High schools do not have a general supply list.

RELATED STORY: Here’s The List Of Adjusted Start And Dismissal Times For Escambia County Schools

ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS

Headphones are not required, however, they are recommended for all grade levels.

Kindergarten

  • Crayons — 4 (24-count packs)
  • Scissors — 1 pair blunt tip
  • Glue sticks — 12
  • Glue — 2 (4-ounce bottles)
  • Plastic Duo-Tang folders — 2 (solid colors)
  • Plastic school box — 1
  • Spiral notebooks — 3 wide ruled
  • Dry erase markers — 4
  • Copy paper — 2 reams (white)
  • Pink erasers — 2
  • Yellow wooden pencils — 24 (No. 2, sharpened)
  • Headphones (recommended)
  • Facial tissue (optional)
  • Colored pencils (optional)
  • Colored markers (optional)
  • Antibacterial wipes (optional)
  • Quart or gallon Ziplock bags (optional)
  • Hand sanitizer (optional)

First grade

  • Crayons — 4 (24-count packs)
  • Scissors — 1 pair blunt tip
  • Glue sticks — 6
  • Glue — 1 bottle (4 ounces)
  • Plastic Duo-Tang folders — 2 with pockets and prongs
  • Plastic school box — 1
  • Spiral notebooks — 2 wide ruled
  • Dry erase markers — 4
  • Copy paper — 2 reams (white)
  • Eraser caps — 1 package
  • Pink erasers — 4
  • Yellow wooden pencils — 48 No. 2, sharpened
  • Headphones (recommended)
  • Facial tissue (optional)
  • Highlighters (optional)
  • Washable markers (optional)
  • Antibacterial wipes (optional)
  • Hand sanitizer (optional)

Second grade

  • Crayons — 3 packs (24-count packs)
  • Scissors — 1 pair
  • Glue sticks — 6
  • Glue — 1 bottle (4 ounces)
  • Plastic Duo-Tang folders — 4 with pockets and prongs and in solid colors
  • Plastic school box — 1
  • Spiral notebooks — 3 wide ruled
  • Notebook paper — 1 pack wide ruled
  • Copy paper — 2 reams (white)
  • Pink erasers — 4
  • Eraser caps — 2 packages
  • Yellow wooden pencils — 48 count No. 2, sharpened
  • Headphones (recommended)
  • Facial tissue (optional)
  • Dry erase markers (optional)
  • Hand sanitizer (optional)
  • Highlighters (optional)
  • Antibacterial wipes (optional)
  • Colored pencils (optional)

Third grade

  • Crayons — 2 (24-county packs)
  • Scissors — 1 pair
  • Glue sticks — 6
  • Glue — 1 bottle (4 ounces)
  • Plastic Duo-Tang folders — 5 with pockets and prongs and in solid colors
  • Plastic school box or zippered pouch — 1
  • Composition notebooks — 2
  • Notebook paper — 2 packs wide ruled
  • Copy paper — 2 reams white
  • Pink erasers — 2
  • Eraser caps — 3 packages
  • Yellow wooden pencils — 48 No. 2, sharpened
  • Headphones (recommended)
  • Dry erase markers (optional)
  • Highlighters (optional)
  • Hand sanitizer (optional)
  • Facial tissue (optional)
  • Antibacterial wipes (optional)
  • Hand sanitizer (optional)

Fourth grade

  • Crayons — 2 (24-count packs)
  • Colored pencils — 1 (12-count pack)
  • Glue sticks — 4
  • Glue — 1 bottle (4 ounces)
  • Scissors — 1 pair
  • Plastic Duo-Tang folders — 1 of each color: yellow, red, blue, green, purple, orange and with pockets and prongs
  • Composition notebooks — 4
  • Notebook paper — 2 wide ruled
  • Cap erasers — 24
  • Yellow wooden pencils — 48 No. 2, sharpened
  • Multi-colored highlighters — 1 pack
  • Headphones (recommended)
  • Facial tissue (optional)
  • Hand sanitizer (optional)
  • Dry erase markers (optional)
  • White copy paper (optional)
  • Hand sanitizer (optional)

Fifth grade

  • Colored pencils — 1 pack
  • Glue — 2 bottles (4 ounces) or glue sticks — 4
  • Scissors — 1 pair
  • Duo-Tang folders — 2 of each color: yellow, red, blue, green, orange with pockets and prongs
  • Zippered pouch — 1 or plastic school box — 1
  • Spiral notebooks — 3
  • Notebook paper — 4 packs wide ruled
  • Cap erasers — 24
  • Yellow wooden pencils — 48 No. 2, sharpened
  • Multi-colored highlighters — 1 pack
  • Headphones (recommended)
  • Facial tissue (optional)
  • 1½ – 2 inch binder (optional)
  • Dry erase markers (optional)
  • Antibacterial wipes (optional)
  • Hand sanitizer (optional)

MIDDLE SCHOOL

(All grades)

  • No. 2 pencils
  • Blue or Black ink pens
  • Wide ruled notebook paper
  • Pack of multi-colored highlighters
  • Zippered binder or 2 inch, 3 ring notebook and set of 10 dividers
  • Earbuds
  • Texas Instruments TI30X solar powered calculator for Algebra I only

Heavy Hitters Go Quiet In 4-0 Shutout Loss

August 7, 2021

Noah Zavolas (W, 4-6) pitched seven shutout innings as Pensacola came up short in a 4-0 loss to Biloxi Friday night at MGM Park.

Zavolas turned in one of his best outings of the year scattering five hits and three walks across his start while also striking out seven.

The Wahoos best chance to score may have come early in the game. In the top of the first the Wahoos loaded the bases via three Zavolas walks; however, Demetrius Sims flew out to right field with two outs to end the threat.

In an abbreviated outing for Pensacola, Jake Eder (L, 3-5) was handed a tough-luck loss as he yielded one unearned run in three innings of work. After Eder retired the leadoff hitter to begin the bottom of the first, Sims and Marcos Rivera botched back-to-back grounders to set up the Shuckers with first and second and only one out. Alexander Palma followed with an RBI single to put the Shuckers ahead 1-0. Eder remained composed and forced David Fry into an inning-ending double play to end the threat.

Eder finished the night having surrendered one hit and picked up three strikeouts in his three innings on Friday,

In the second inning, Santiago Chavez led off the road half of the inning with a lead-off double for the Wahoos. Zavolas, unphased, retired the next three batters to end the potential threat.

Pensacola’s top four hitters in the lineup (JJ Bleday, Peyton Burdick, Griffin Conine and Brian Navarreto) struggled against Biloxi’s starter. The four hitters finished the night a combined 0-for-14 with two walks and four strikeouts.

Most of Biloxi’s damage came late in the game. Eight of the Shuckers 10 hits came in the final three innings of the game. After Alberto Guerrero allowed a run in his 2.1 innings of work, Dylan Bice was tagged for a pair of runs, courtesy of a David Hamilton two-run homer in the seventh.

Trailing 4-0, Colton Hock made his return to the Blue Wahoos. He worked a scoreless eighth inning in his first appearance since July 4th, which was also against the Shuckers.

ECSO Update: Woman Will Not Face Charges Of Kidnapping Her Grandchildren

August 6, 2021

The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office now says the 50-year old Escambia County woman originally accused of kidnapping her grandchildren will not face charges.

The ECSO said Thursday that Amy Patterson Cannon was arrested and her grandchildren were found safe, a day after stating she was wanted for two counts of kidnapping minors under the age of 13.

After further investigation, it was determined that Cannon will not face an charges, the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office said Friday morning.

Northview’s Student Athletes Rank No. 6 Academically In Florida Class 1A

August 6, 2021

All of Northview High School’s student athletes were collectively ranked No. 6 academically in the state in Class 1A for the 2020-2021 school year, according to rankings from the Florida High School Athletic Association.

Northview High School students not only work hard athletically, but also in the classroom,” said Obreonne Smith, Northview athletic director. “This is a great accomplishment for the students, staff and school.”

Pictured: Class of 2021 members of the Northview High School Lady Chiefs softball team. Pictured below: Last year’s Chiefs baseball team celebrates a district win over Jay. NorthEscambia.com photos.

Escambia Considers Zoning Change To Allow Larger Retail Space In Some Rural Areas

August 6, 2021

When Dollar General considered building a new store in Walnut Hill earlier this year, their development company ran into a problem with Escambia County zoning. But now the Escambia County Commission is considering a Land Development Code change that would make such development possible in rural areas.

Teramore Development had three properties under contract at the intersection of Highway 97 and Highway 99A in Walnut Hill, next to Ernest Ward Middle School, for a 10,640 square foot Dollar General.

The property is currently zoned Rural Mixed Use (RMU) which allows commercial buildings up to 6,000 square feet. There is currently no provision whatsoever to grant any exceptions to construct a larger commercial building.

Now, the BOCC is considering an ordinance recommended Escambia County Planning Board that would allow up to 15,000 square feet in RMU districts with a conditional use approval for any business, not just a Dollar General. That conditional use provision, County Attorney Alison Rogers told NorthEscambia.com, would mean each request for RMU retail sales construction up to 15,000 square feet would required individual approval by the Board of Adjustment.

The county commission held the first of two public hearings on the ordinance Thursday night. The second public hearing and final vote will come on August 19.

Properties zoned as RMU in Escambia County are typically located near rural community centers and most are not currently used for agriculture.

To date, a Dollar General for Walnut Hill has not moved forward in the development or permitting process.

Pictured: A proposed Dollar General for Walnut Hill as presented in February 2021 by their development firm. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.

John David Loewen

August 6, 2021

John David Loewen was born January 31, 1947 to John and Sally Allen Loewen in Merced,
California. He peacefully departed this life early in the morning of August 4, 2021 at his residence
in Oakwood Manor, Brooksville, Mississippi, having reached the age of 74 years.
His first childhood home was in Merced, but owing to circumstances beyond his control, his
young world became fractured when his parents separated. When he was around age 10, he was
permanently taken in and raised by his paternal grandparents, Dave and Catherine Loewen, who
had moved some years earlier to Walnut Hill, Florida. His uncle Jim was like an older brother,
mentor, and even surrogate father at times, helping to mold his young life and teaching many
valuable skills and lessons for life. He resided in Walnut Hill nearly all his life until difficulties with
his health necessitated moving to Oakwood Manor in August of 2020.
He answered God’s call at age 16 and was baptized into the Church of God in Christ,
Mennonite by minister Wilbert Peters. He grew up in the same community as Barbara, the girl who
later became his wife, and they were married on a Friday evening, November 24, 1967. They shared
53 years of married life, and their home was blessed with four children—two sons and two
daughters—Pam, Michael, Faye, and Winston. In the earlier years of his married life, he searched
for a deeper understanding of God’s will for his life, and his search was rewarded with a greater
appreciation for spiritual things. His belief in the Church being his spiritual family increased as the
years passed.
He was a diligent worker and provided for his family with autobody repair and painting,
row-crop farming, and aquaculture. For much of his life, beginning even in his childhood, he
suffered from significant health issues, enduring numerous hospitalizations and multiple surgeries.
Despite these setbacks, he was not a complainer but rather forged ahead as his strength permitted
and worked to the best of his ability.
His personable nature coupled with his quick wit and sense of humor earned many dear
friends, and his attitude was an encouragement to many. Singing was special to him, and he enjoyed
quite a number of years singing tenor in a quartet with his friends. His life is an example of God’s
ability to create a valuable object from broken pieces, and this perhaps will be his most inspiring
legacy.
He will be missed and never forgotten by his wife Barbara, four children: Pam, Michael &
Lynette, Faye & James, and Winston & Renee together with their families; one brother Michael
and one sister Thalia, thirteen grandchildren and one great-grandchild; two brothers-in-law:
Richard & Wilma and Lynn; two sisters-in-law: Alice & Norman and Virginia Koehn together with
their families.
Funeral service will be Sunday, August 8, 2021 at 10:00 a.m. at Walnut Hill Mennonite
Church in Walnut Hill, FL with Minister Galen Harms, Minister Mike Koehn and Minister
Wilbert Peters officiating. Interment will follow at Walnut Hill Memorial Gardens.
Visitation will be Saturday, August 7, 2021 from 6:30 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. at Walnut Hill
Mennonite Church in Walnut Hill, FL.

Summer Afternoon Showers Possible Through The Weekend

August 6, 2021

Here is your official North Escambia area forecast:

Friday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 10pm. Partly cloudy, with a low around 70. Southwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm.

Saturday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 1pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 90. Calm wind becoming southwest around 5 mph in the afternoon.

Saturday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly clear, with a low around 72. Southwest wind around 5 mph.

Sunday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 1pm. Sunny, with a high near 91. West wind around 5 mph becoming south in the afternoon.

Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 73. South wind around 5 mph.

Monday: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Sunny, with a high near 94. West wind around 5 mph becoming south in the afternoon.

Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 73. Southwest wind around 5 mph.

Tuesday: A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 94.

Tuesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 73.

Wednesday: Showers and thunderstorms likely. Mostly sunny, with a high near 94. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Wednesday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly clear, with a low around 73.

Thursday: Showers and thunderstorms likely. Mostly sunny, with a high near 94. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

BOCC Releases Legal Opinion That 401(a) Annuity Plan Is In Fact Legal

August 6, 2021

The Escambia County Commission voted Thursday night to release an outside legal opinion that states the county’s 401(a) annuity plan is in fact legal for elected officials and senior management.

The item was brought to the agenda by Commissioner Jeff Bergosh, who does not participate in the plan but still holds an Florida Retirement System pension plan from his time on the Escambia County School Board. It passed 4-0, with Commissioner Doug Underhill off the dais and not participating in the discussion.

In late July, Escambia County Clerk Pam Childers asserted that state has told her that the county’s 401(a) annuity plan is illegal. Thursday night, she sat silently on the dais as commissioners carried on their conversation.

The board obtained an outside legal opinion from Michael Mattimore of Allen Norton & Blue, which Bergosh described as a “very expensive, high end government firm out of Tallahassee”.

“It is my opinion that the Local 401(a) Annuity Program is legal,” Mattimore wrote of that plan. To read the complete opinion (pdf), click or tap here.

Commissioners Stephen Barry, Robert Bender and Lumon May all opted for the plan.

Barry said there was additional documentation in Internal Revenue Service code and from Westlaw, an online legal research service and proprietary database for lawyers and legal professionals, that references the legality plan type. The commissioner’s vote also allowed the release of that information.

“Once we share (the legal opinion), I want to share everything,” Barry said in response to releasing the legal opinion.

“It’s been alleged that it is illegal because it is not a local annuity. That’s not true,” Barry added.

“To think that I did something illegal be completing a piece of paperwork that HR gave me when I started this position,” Bender said. “I didn’t have vote in it. I didn’t do anything with it. They (HR) said here are your three options, and I chose one.”

“No one could fault you for that,” Bergosh replied.

“The plan goes back to 1997, 25 years give or take, and we’ve had 25 audits that have never pointed to any issues to the plan,” Barry remarked.

“We should certainly not only get an opinion, but we should get a court order,” May said. “It should be brought forth because it deserves to be decided whether by commission or omission is this legal, is it ethical, or is it right. I do believe that it is.”

The board also voted 4-0 Thursday night to instruct Rogers “procure some outside help” on the matter, “without defining exactly it is”.

401(a) Annuity Program

It’s called a 401(a) annuity program, and under state statute was offered only to senior management service employees and commissioners that opt out of the Florida Retirement System (FRS). It’s available statewide, not just in Escambia County.

The plan does not cost Escambia County taxpayers anything extra when contributions are made in a timely fashion; the employee contributions are exactly the same whether or not the money goes into FRS or the annuity program. FRS has significant administrative overhead and fund liability that is funded from employee contributions. The 401(a) annuity plan participant costs are lower, so participants can earn significantly more retirement dollars.

Escambia County has offered a 401(a) annuity program to senior management employees and elected officials since 1997.

15-Year Old Charged With Armed Robbery Of Pine Forest Road Dollar General

August 6, 2021

A 15-year old has been charged with the armed robbery of a Pine Forest Road Dollar General on Monday.

Logan Alexander Hardy was charged Thursday with armed robbery and two counts of aggravated assault using a firearm during the commission of a felony.

According to the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office, Hardy was armed with a gun when walked into the Dollar General on Pine Forest just north of Highway 297A about 9:23 Monday morning and asked the clerk for $5. He fled in a yellow car with “small amount” of cash.

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