Escambia Mira Awards Honor Most Creative Seniors

April 15, 2016

The Escambia County Public Schools Foundation honored 68 of Escambia County’s outstanding creative high school seniors at the 2016 Mira Creative Arts Awards Ceremony Thursday night in Pensacola.

Mira Creative Arts Awards recipients were nominated by their high school teachers for their achievements in the creative arts.  At the ceremony, the students received commemorative engraved medallions and Certificates of Special Congressional Recognition from Congressman Jeff Miller.

Recipients of the 2016 Mira Creative Arts Award were:

Honorees are listed below under a photo from each school, scroll down, click to enlarge.

Escambia High School

Megan R. Berrian, Theatre/Chorus
Brody Cecil, Instrumental Music
Tyler Crowe, Instrumental Music
Rebecca Lin Edwards, Visual Arts
Carly Gill, Digital Multimedia
Veronica Guersney, Culinary Arts
Trevor King, Instrumental Music
Avery Lockett, Instrumental Music
Brianna Renee Miller, Yearbook
Kayla Jean Wood, Visual Arts


Northview High School

Jessica Amerson, Yearbook
Tamara Barrows, Visual Arts
Cheyenne Gray, Visual Arts
Abbie Johnson, Instrumental Music
Bethany Reynolds, Yearbook
Elizabeth Sanders, Visual Arts
Jordan Taylor, Yearbook
Harmoni Till, Theatre
Bradley Van Pelt, Writing
Haylee Weaver, Public Speaking


Pensacola High School

Allison Cramer, Theatre
Katherine Englemeyer, Instrumental Music
Lauren Heidenreich, Photography
Kierstan Johnson, Journalism
Darriell Jones, Visual Arts
Christian Kyles-Smith, Theatre
Ariel Noethlich, Visual Arts
Jonathan Voyles, Instrumental Music


Pine Forest High School

Benjamin Blevins, Robotics
Jasmine Brown, Visual Arts
Amanda Faller, Television Production
Trey Haynes, Vocal Music
Alyssa Javier, Vocal Music
Kristina McKinnon, Journalism
Tabitha Reno, Cyber Security
Jordan Riddle, Instrumental Music
Christopher Schofield, Instrumental Music
Callastasia Williams, Visual Arts


Tate High School

Sarah Mae Cagle, Mock Trial
Bryce Coots, Instrumental Music
Troy Craig, Theatre
Michele Danley, Visual Arts
Jessica Edge, Vocal Music
Tiffany Griffin, Instrumental Music
McClain Houdashelt, Theatre
Brianna Snyder, Instrumental Music
Cody Swilley, Instrumental Music
Kaela Tibbs, Vocal Music


Booker T. Washington High School

Kristen Bonanno, Visual Arts
Isaiah Gonzalez, Theatre
Kina Kawakami, Instrumental Music
Yuliya Sola Lee, Instrumental Music
Madison G. O’Toole, Visual Arts
Alana Marie Pacheco, Journalism
Cody Alan Paquette, Instrumental Music
Anna Safko, Theatre
Hannah Spears, Theatre
Jackson Van Matre, Instrumental Music


West Florida High School

Lynn Ruth Arthur, Photography
Cheynne Byrd, Instrumental Music
Lane Markham Isbell, Graphic/Digital Design
Melissa Jansen, Graphic/Digital Design
Katie McArthur, Graphic/Digital Design
Mariah McMullen, Instrumental Music
Bianca Mutter, Journalism
Stephen Rodgers, III, Visual Arts
Yana Thompson, Visual Arts
Stephen Woodson, Theatre

In 1987, a group of teachers at J. M. Tate High School created the Mira Awards to recognize talented and creative students in the arts and sciences.  The following year, the committee approached the Foundation to bring the awards under its umbrella and to initiate county-wide student participation each year in the areas of writing, performing and visual arts, and other creative disciplines.  The term “Mira” is Latin for the name of the brightest star in the constellation Cetus.

NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge

Escambia Man Indicted For Premeditated Murder Of His Wife

April 15, 2016

An Escambia County Grand Jury has indicted 44-year old Christopher Crain for first degree premeditated murder in the death of wife, June Ann Crain.

June Ann Crain was found beaten to death of March 20, 2016, at the couple’s home in the 4100 block of Tonbridge Circle.

A witness found her in bed with blood on the wall and floor around her. She called 911 and deputies responded to the home.

Christopher Crain was taken into custody at the residence. He is being held in the Escambia County Jail without bond.

Scott Signs Education Bills

April 15, 2016

A wide-ranging education bill dealing with everything from funding for high-performing universities to school membership in athletic associations was signed into law Thursday by Gov. Rick Scott.

The 160-page measure (HB 7029), which ended up almost three times as long as its original version, was approved by lawmakers on the last day of this year’s legislative session. It touched on virtually every level of public education in the state.

The measure would allow parents to transfer their children to any public school in the state that isn’t at capacity through an “open enrollment” process; add to state law performance-funding formulas for colleges and universities; allow private schools to join the Florida High School Athletic Association or other organizations on a sport-by-sport basis; and give charter schools that serve lower-income students or those with disabilities a bigger slice of construction funding doled out by the state.

The bill would also send additional funds to “emerging pre-eminent” universities — possibly the University of Central Florida and the University of South Florida. Those schools are approaching the pre-eminent status that provides extra money to the University of Florida and Florida State University.

“This is a great day for students across Florida as Governor Scott signs into law historic legislation to increase school choice options across our K-12 education system by allowing parents to have a greater say regarding which of our neighborhood public schools their child will attend,” said Senate Education Appropriations Chairman Don Gaetz, a Niceville Republican who handled the bill in the Senate.

Scott and other leaders praised the performance-funding portion of the bill. State universities are entering their third year of receiving a share of state funds under the formula, but the new law makes the change permanent.

“We have seen the positive impact performance-based funding has had on our state universities and students,” Scott said in a statement issued through the university system. “Performance funding helps increase graduation rates, which translates into less debt for our students and their families.”

A handful of other education measures were included in a batch of 20 bills Scott signed Thursday. The governor touted a bill (HB 7019) aimed at holding down higher-education costs by pushing textbook affordability measures and repealing a law allowing the Florida Board of Governors to give individual universities’ boards of trustees the ability to increase graduate tuition.

Also, Scott signed bills that will create a pilot program aimed at giving principals more autonomy in the way they run schools (HB 287); more clearly spell out how education for homebound and hospitalized students should be handled (HB 585); and deal with emergency allergy treatments in schools (HB 1305).

by Brandon Larrabee, The News Service of Florida

Wahoos Erupt For Four Runs To Beat Jacksonville

April 15, 2016

Barrett Astin, Wandy Peralta and Alejandro Chacin combined to pitch four scoreless innings, allow one hit and strikeout five as the Pensacola Blue Wahoos beat the Jacksonville Suns, 4-1, Thursday at Blue Wahoos Stadium. The Blue Wahoos are off to their best start in team history at 6-2, surpassing the 2012 team that started 5-3.

Chacin earned his second save of the season in four games and now has four strikeouts in four innings pitched. The relievers came in and got out the first 10 batters they faced after Sal Romano pitched five strong innings. He got six of his seven strikeouts in the first three innings, while allowing three hits and one earned run in the first inning.

Romano, the Cincinnati Reds No. 9 prospect according to Baseball America, also showed some defensive skills, reaching out to nab a hard hit grounder and getting the speedy Suns lead-off hitter Yefri Perez out at first.

Pensacola manager Pat Kelly said he had questions about his bullpen coming into the year but has called Chacin “fearless.”

“It’s been nice to have great pitching,” Kelly said. “We have a lot of flexibility and some good arms. They’ve been doing really good.”

The Blue Wahoos now lead the Suns, 2-1, in the five game home stand. In 2015, Pensacola didn’t win its first series until May. But this year, they’re going for their second straight series win to start the season.

Pensacola trailed, 1-0, until it erupted in the sixth inning, scoring four runs and sending nine hitters to the plate.

Jacksonville took the lead in the first inning when Suns shortstop J.T. Riddle singled on a soft liner to right field. Suns left fielder Austin Dean then smashed a high fly ball over the head of left fielder Pin-Chieh Chen, which scored Riddle easily.

However, first baseman Donald Lutz led off the sixth with a walk and scored Pensacola’s first run when the Blue Wahoos loaded the bases and catcher Joe Hudson then earned a walk to tie the game, 1-1. Then Chen, who had a bunt single, scored on pinch hitter Ray Chang’s blooper to centerfield that put the Blue Wahoos up, 2-1.

But the biggest hit in the sixth inning when Pensacola shortstop Zach Vincej slapped a two-out single that dropped in front of the center fielder and scored both right fielder Sebastian Elizalde and catcher Joe Hudson. The runs gave Pensacola some breathing room, 4-1.

Vincej said he was just looking for a good pitch to hit.

“The previous at bat, I popped up with guys on base,” said Vincej, who’s hitting .290 this season. “I was just trying to put some barrel on it.”

Four of the first five innings, Pensacola’s first batter reached base. But the runners remained stranded. The best chance to score came in the fourth inning when Pensacola center fielder Phillip Ervin walked to lead off the inning and Lutz followed by smashing a single over the head of the shortstop. But Lutz rounded first base and was tagged out in a rundown.

Jacksonville right-hander Austin Brice, the Marlins No. 14 prospect, ended up pitching five innings allowing two hits, walking four and striking out two. In his two starts this season, Brice has pitched 11 scoreless innings.

“What I saw was a pretty good pitcher,” Kelly said. “Brice threw extremely well. On a cold night, he pitched us inside.”

But it has been Pensacola’s bullpen that has consistently impressed Vincej.

“They have come in and shut the door,” Vincej said. “It makes it a lot easier on the defense. We can go out and play relaxed.”

Tate, Jay Softball Disrict Championship Games Postponed Due To Weather

April 14, 2016

Softball district championships scheduled for tonight have been delayed to Friday night due to weather.

The Jay Royals and South Walton game has been moved to Friday at 6 p.m. at Northview in District 3-1A.

The Tate Lady Aggies and Pace at  Escambia  game has been moved to 6:30 p.m. Friday in District 1-7A.

More Narcotic Arrests In Flomaton, Including McDavid Woman

April 14, 2016

The war on drugs in Flomaton is continuing with additional drug arrests Wednesday.

Wednesday morning, a Flomaton Police Department officer spotted a suspicious vehicle sitting next to the Tom Thumb. A K-9 unit from the Escambia County (AL) Sheriff’s Office responded and alerted on the vehicle.

Over 100 grams of liquid  cocaine, one gram of cocaine powder and a gram of methamphetamine were recovered from the vehicle, according to Flomaton Police Chief Bryan Davis.

Valene Alaine Walker, 30, of McDavid, and Jeremy Anderson Pete, 29, of Castleberry, AL, were each charged with multiple felonies include possession of controlled substance, possession of controlled substances including cocaine and methamphetamine, possession of drug paraphernalia and cocaine trafficking.

Both were booked into the Escambia County (AL) Detention Center in Brewton.

The Flomaton Police Department reported another double drug arrest Wednesday night. Details were not immediately available as officers inventoried a quantity of pills.

Wednesday’s drug arrests in Flomaton came on the heels of several other narcotic arrests. Click here for an earlier story.

Pictured top: Drugs recovered from a vehicle Wednesday morning in Flomaton. Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.

Jay Woman Arrested Second Time For Sexual Assault On Juvenile

April 14, 2016

A Jay woman has been arrested a second time for sexual misconduct with a minor.

Kimberly Anne Seevers, 45, was arrested in Santa Rosa County on a charge of sexual assault on a victim 16 or 17 years old. In an unrelated case, Seevers was arrested last November for sexual assault on a victim 16 or 17 years old and one count of contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

The two arrests involved separate incidents involving different juveniles age 16 or 17, according to Assistant State Attorney James Parker.

“The victim described a physical encounter with Seevers,” he said.

Parker said the second male victim was discovered during the course of the investigation into the first set of charges.

The first arrest came after the school resource officer at Jay High School received information in regards to a possible sexual relationship between Seevers and juvenile males. Seevers is not employed by or connected with the Santa Rosa County School District.

Both sexual assaults allegedly occurred at her home, the second between September and November 2015.

Seevers was released Wednesday from the Santa Rosa County Jail on $5,000 bond. Parker said prosecutors had request the judge set bond at $50,000. She previously entered a plea of not guilty and is awaiting trial on the November charges.

White Quickly Piles Up Money For Hill’s House Seat

April 14, 2016

Preparing to run for a Northwest Florida House seat, Pensacola Republican Frank White raised nearly $62,000 during the last week of March, according to a newly filed campaign-finance report.

White opened a campaign account March 23 to run in House District 2 and quickly raised $61,970. He also loaned $50,000 to the campaign, according to information posted on the state Division of Elections website.

White is the vice chairman of the Pensacola State College Board of Trustees and is managing director of an investment group. He is also the son-in-law of  car dealership owner Sandy Sansing.

District 2 is held by Rep. Mike Hill, a Pensacola Beach Republican who could run this year for the state Senate. Sen. Greg Evers, R-Baker, is weighing a bid to replace Republican Congressman Jeff Miller, who has announced he will not seek another term.

by The News Service of Florida with contribution from NorthEscambia.com

Wildlife Commission Sets Sights On Another Bear Hunt

April 14, 2016

Armed with updated data showing a “robust” and growing black-bear population, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is working to hold another bear hunt.

Commission Chairman Brian Yablonski on Wednesday directed staff and commissioners to prepare to discuss during a June meeting how a hunt could be managed. A commission spokeswoman said later that a decision has not been made to hold a hunt.

“There is a process of how the hunt is set up, what the quota objectives are,” Yablonski said during a commission meeting at the Wyndham Grand Jupiter at Harbourside Place in Jupiter. “There’s a ton of options out there.”

The Florida Administrative Code already includes an outline for an annual bear hunt to be held in late October, and Yablonski said it’s up to the commission to set quota numbers.

The commission in October 2015 held its first bear hunt in more than two decades as a means to slow the increase of black bears in the state and to reduce dangerous interactions between bears and humans. But the hunt was highly controversial, with opponents protesting in various parts of the state.

Jacki Lopez, the Center for Biological Diversity’s Florida director, said Wednesday opponents have “been anticipating” the commission putting the quota issue on an upcoming agenda.

Conservation groups headed by the Center for Biological Diversity and the Animal Legal Defense Fund have petitioned the federal government to approve an endangered-species protection designation for Florida black bears.

The commission last year set a collective “harvest objective” of 320 bears that could be killed in four parts of the state opened for the hunt. The areas were the eastern Panhandle region, which includes the northwestern Big Bend area to west of Apalachicola Bay; the South region, which includes Broward, Collier, Hendry, Lee, Miami-Dade, Monroe, and Palm Beach counties, the North region, which goes from Jacksonville west to Hamilton and Suwannee counties, and the Central region, which includes the St. Johns River watershed to the Ocala National Forest.

The quota was based on an estimated 3,000-plus bears being in the state.

A limit of one-bear-per-hunter was set. Hunting permits were sold at $100 to state residents and $300 for people from out-of-state. A total of 3,778 permits were sold. Money raised through the permits is supposed to be used for measures, such as bear-proof garbage containers, to reduce human-bear conflicts.

The 2015 hunt was projected to last up to a week. Instead the hunt was called off after two days as the bear death count quickly reached 304.

Commission officials admitted to being caught off guard by the success of the hunters.

On March 24, the commission increased the estimate of the number of bears in the state to 4,350 adults, based on survey results taken before the 2015 hunt.

The commission also estimated about 2,000 bear cubs statewide, of which about half are expected to survive into adulthood.

The bear population had been as low as 300 to 500 statewide in the 1970s, when bears were put on the state list of threatened species because of a mix of hunting and humans impacting their natural habitat. Bears were removed from the list in 2012 when a new management plan was approved.

In 2015, lawmakers increased penalties for people who repeatedly are found feeding bears not in captivity.

This year, Florida lawmakers included $500,000 to reduce human-bear conflicts in the state’s new $82 billion budget. Commission Executive Director Nick Wiley said Wednesday that the majority of the money must go to local governments with ordinances in place requiring residents and businesses to secure their trash.

by Jim Turner, The News Service of Florida

Scott Signs Tax-Cut Package Including Back To School Tax Holiday

April 14, 2016

Gov. Rick Scott on Wednesday signed a trimmed-down package of tax cuts that will permanently eliminate a sales tax on manufacturing equipment and set up a three-day tax “holiday” for back-to-school shoppers.

However, the signing came with less flourish than might have been expected for one of Scott’s top priorities during the recent legislative session.

Scott held a ceremonial bill-signing as the undercard of an announcement by Novolex — which makes plastic bags — that it’s expanding a manufacturing facility in Jacksonville.

In a release, the governor’s office noted that “during the announcement, Gov. Scott also ceremonially signed HB 7099.”

“This bill will not only give Florida families an important back-to-school sales tax holiday, but it will also permanently eliminate the sales tax on manufacturing machinery and equipment so companies like Novolex can invest more money in growing their business and creating new jobs,” Scott said in the release. “We will continue to do all we can to cut more taxes and support economic growth so Florida can become first for jobs.”

The package, a legislative compromise that totals $129 million in the fiscal year that begins July 1, includes a Scott priority to eliminate a sales tax on manufacturing equipment. It also exempts sales taxes on food and drinks sold by veterans’ organizations and phases out — over three years — a sales tax on asphalt used for government projects.

The measure also revises how taxes are calculated on alcohol and tobacco sales for cruise ships within Florida waters, on pear cider, and on an excise tax on aviation fuel, which is a discount for most carriers.

For many Floridians, the biggest part of the package will be a sales-tax “holiday” for back-to-school shoppers. However, the holiday will run from Aug. 5 to Aug. 7, rather than the 10 days initially proposed by Scott and many lawmakers.

In addition to the shorter period, the amount of savings available to shoppers will be lower than in earlier proposals. For example, shoppers will be able to avoid paying sales taxes on clothes that cost $60 or less, down from an earlier $100 proposal. Also, computer purchases won’t be included in the holiday. The measure also lifts the tax on school supplies costing $15 or less.

Regardless of the number of days, the Florida Retail Federation says the tax holiday provides an economic boost to retailers.

“We look forward to the savings that consumers will enjoy and the increased sales for retailers during the anticipated back-to-school sales tax holiday shopping weekend,” Florida Retail Federation President and CEO Randy Miller said in a release.

Scott had sought more than $1 billion in tax cuts for the upcoming fiscal year and $250 million for business-recruitment incentives at the public-private Enterprise Florida.

But as state tax-revenue projections declined, lawmakers agreed not to provide any of the incentive money and downsized the tax-cut package.

Still, lawmakers have joined Scott in saying that $1 billion in tax relief has been approved over a two-year period, a figure Scott campaigned on in 2014 as part of his re-election bid.

Last year, lawmakers approved a tax cut package that totaled $428.9 million, topped by a reduction in the communications-services tax on cell-phone and cable-TV bills.

This year, lawmakers say Floridians also will get tax savings because the newly approved 2016-2017 budget includes money to hold down local property taxes that would otherwise go into the state’s school-funding formula. The issue involves part of the formula known as “required local effort.”

With the property tax money, the Senate put the “tax relief” for the coming year at more than $550 million.

House Finance & Tax Chairman Matt Gaetz, R-Fort Walton Beach, said the relief is “over a half billion dollars for this session.”

“We have made the decision in Florida that we can grow our economy, meet the needs of our state and care for the vulnerable not by having more taxes, but by having more taxpayers,” Gaetz said in a prepared statement. “These tax cuts welcome new families, businesses, and visitors to our state each day.”

by Jim Turner, The News Service of Florida

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