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UPDATE: Candidates selected for Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office appeals board

 Ten candidates qualified for an election to determine two Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office Personnel Standards and Review Board members.Additional candidates qualifying by the June 30 deadline are: Christopher Hyden, Laurel Hill; Becky Lynn Jones, Valparaiso; Martin White, Niceville; and Steven Menchel, Destin.

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CRESTVIEW — Six candidates qualify for an election to determine two Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office Personnel Standards and Review Board members.

They are  Johnny Eubanks, Crestview; Bill Byerley, Shalimar; Howard Oakes and Joseph Sharpe, both of Niceville;  Noble Wyninegar Jr., Fort Walton Beach; and Joseph Winkeler, Destin.

Elected members — serving alongside two appointees by Sheriff Larry Ashley and a fifth member chosen by the four — will hear the appeals of former deputies Rick Hord, John Lee and Jon Bush, who were fired in 2010.

Okaloosa County Supervisor of Elections Paul Lux will conduct the election at his Crestview and Fort Walton Beach offices. OCSO employees can vote from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. July 14 on both ends of the county.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: UPDATE: Candidates selected for Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office appeals board

Laurel Hill City Council deadlocks on new member — again

Neither former mayor and councilwoman Joan Smith nor former councilwoman Willie Mae Toles were selected to fill a vacant Laurel Hill City Council seat when the four-member council deadlocked on both applicants at Thursday evening's meeting.

LAUREL HILL — It was a case of déjà vu all over again when the City Council deadlocked on selection of a new councilwoman to fill the seat vacated by Johnny James.

Former councilwomen Joan Smith and Willie Mae Toles both submitted applications for the vacant spot, having lost the March election to current Council Members Debra Adams and Scott Moneypenny.

Smith was also a previous Laurel Hill mayor.

Adams moved to appoint Toles to fill the vacancy, with Councilman Daniel Lane joining her in favor of the motion. Moneypenny and Council Chairman Larry Hendren voted nay.

Moneypenny then nominated Smith, with Hendren also voting for his motion and Adams and Lane opposed.

With the council deadlocked, both motions failed, leaving the seat vacant.

The city council spent more than a year deadlocked over filling a vacant seat in 2014 and the early part of this year until voters put Adams and Moneypenny in office.

However, James' eligibility was called into question when it was determined he lived outside the city limits and he was forced to step down, once again leaving an open seat on the body.

Hendren said the council will take up the issue again at next month's meeting.

Email News Bulletin Staff Writer Brian Hughes at brianh@crestviewbulletin.com, follow him on Twitter @cnbBrian or call 850-682-6524.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Laurel Hill City Council deadlocks on new member — again

Laurel Hill millage rate to remain unchanged for 2015-16

LAUREL HILL— The City Council unanimously approved setting a 3.5 mills millage rate for the 2015-16 fiscal year.

The rate is unchanged from this year. By law, once it is established, the millage rate cannot be raised during budget planning, although it can be lowered.

One mill is $1 of tax per thousand dollars of taxable property value.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Laurel Hill millage rate to remain unchanged for 2015-16

Laurel Hill solicits bids for road repaving

LAUREL HILL — Repaving could begin in as little as four or five weeks on several city roads now that the city has been cleared by the state Department of Economic Opportunity to begin soliciting bids for the work.

The city received a $600,000 community block development grant in September 2014 to pave several of its worst roads. The DEO just cleared the city to begin soliciting bids this week, City Council Chairman Larry Hendren said.

"Nothing happens in a hurry when you're working with the federal government or the state government," Hendren said.

Mayor Robby Adams said contractors will have a month from Sunday to submit bids. The winning contractor will then have 120 days to complete the work.

Roads scheduled for repair are New Ebenezer Road from State Road 85 to Park Avenue; Second Avenue from S.R. 85 to Steele Mill Creek Road; and Fourth Street.

Adams was hopeful the winning bid will be low enough to allow New Ebenezer to be paved all the way to the county line.

Resident Tony Weekly asked how the grant would be affected if the city dissolved, as has been discussed.

"We're not going to do anything until the grant is finished," Hendren said.

Email News Bulletin Staff Writer Brian Hughes at brianh@crestviewbulletin.com, follow him on Twitter @cnbBrian or call 850-682-6524.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Laurel Hill solicits bids for road repaving

Here's the July 7 Crestview Technical Review Committee agenda

CRESTVIEW — The Technical Review Committee will meet at 10 a.m. Tuesday at 198 Wilson St., N.

Here is the meeting's agenda.

1. Convene meeting.

2. Approve minutes of June 2, 2015.

3. Review site development plans for a Gulf Power Sub Station on a 1.38-acre portion of the 4.77-acre parcel at 301 Cadle Drive. Requested by Ashley Jansen, of the Gulf Power Company, Inc., agent for the property owner. LPA 15-13

4. Review Site development plans for HJH Industrial Plaza, a 50,000-square-foot warehouse development consisting of 5 new 10,000-square-foot buildings on a 6.6± acre parcel at 100 Lloyd Street. Requested by Mark Siner, PE of Choctaw Engineering. LPA 15-16.

5. Consider other business as necessary.

6. Adjourn.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Here's the July 7 Crestview Technical Review Committee agenda

Northwest Florida schools gain more funding for military-related students

Four Northwest Florida school districts serving military-related students will receive millions more in state aid next year, following a budget initiative by Sen. Don Gaetz and Rep. Matt Gaetz. The funding was in the budget approved by Gov. Rick Scott.

The “military-connected student supplement” is part of a multi-year initiative by Sen. Gaetz and Rep. Gaetz to make Florida and Florida schools the most military-friendly in the nation.

The funds are designed to help schools pay for additional services, counseling and academic help for students whose parents are deployed or who are affected by military moves.

Under the new state funding formula, Santa Rosa County schools will receive an extra $1,179,653 per year as a “federally connected student supplement.”  Escambia County schools are slated for $1,779,277 in supplemental funding. Bay County is entitled to $794,603 and Okaloosa, with the largest concentration of military students, will benefit from $2,405,227 in extra state support.

In addition, Northwest Florida schools will receive sizable increases in overall funding for 2016.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Northwest Florida schools gain more funding for military-related students

Okaloosa courthouse excluded from state budget

Okaloosa County’s courthouse in Crestview might be old, but this year it wasn’t quite old enough to score state funding for a major renovation.

That's state Rep. Matt Gaetz’s explanation for why the county’s $5 million request was left out of the state’s 2016 budget. Gaetz said he advocated for Okaloosa County’s request but was told the Crestview courthouse — built in the early 1950s — wouldn’t make the cut.

County officials had hoped to add the $5 million to $10 million already budgeted for the restoration and expansion of the courthouse.

The courthouse saw its last major improvements in 1962. Some of its major mechanical systems are running on vintage equipment. Other challenges include a lack of space and security gaps that force the judiciary, prisoners and the public to share the same areas.

In the spring the county worked with an outside consultant to design a courthouse that included major renovations and an addition. It would have added courtrooms, office space and left limited room for future growth.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Okaloosa courthouse excluded from state budget

New Okaloosa County voting equipment could cost as much as $1.2 million

Dominion Voting Systems representative Peter Androutsos demonstrates his company’s tabulating system to the Okaloosa County Supervisor of Elections equipment review board.

CRESTVIEW — County taxpayers will soon have to buy as much as $1.2 million in new vote tabulators, software and related equipment.

Though state law requires all voting be done by paper ballot by 2020, Okaloosa County Supervisor of Elections Paul Lux said he will ask the Board of County Commissioners to purchase new equipment this year.

“The current equipment we’re using is 18 years old,” Lux said. “In the last election we had a noticeable failure of some of that equipment. The equipment has a lifetime of about 10-12 years.

“It’s computerized. Are you still using the computer you bought in 1997?” Lux said.

Lux said his office has been cannibalizing spare voting machines for parts because “Even the repair components don’t exist anymore. The memory cards we use, the manufacturer has gone out of business.”

Tuesday, Lux’s equipment review board received presentations from Election Systems & Software and Dominion Voting Systems.

The board — composed of the political parties’ representatives, BCC members, the League of Women Voters and poll workers — will make a purchase recommendation to the county commissioners next month, Lux said.

“The voters’ experience is not going to change drastically. They’re still filling in ovals on a paper ballot,” Lux said.

The tabulators, however, will detect errors and prompt voters to correct their ballots before it is accepted. Common mistakes include voting for more than one candidate for an office, or not completely blackening an oval, Lux said.

If the BCC approves the purchase, Lux plans to have the new system implemented by mid-November. He estimates the cost will be between $800,000 and $1.2 million.

“Those are preliminary numbers,” he stressed, adding that the equipment can be financed over several years. “It’s not like the county’s got to swallow that bitter pill all in one piece.”

Email News Bulletin Staff Writer Brian Hughes, follow him on Twitter or call 850-682-6524.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: New Okaloosa County voting equipment could cost as much as $1.2 million

State funding not approved for Okaloosa STEMM Center

Okaloosa Schools Superintendent Mary Beth Jackson and the Okaloosa County School Board plan to find an “innovative” solution to cover some of Okaloosa STEMM Center's costs.

It was among a handful of local projects approved by the state Legislature but included in the $461 million that Gov. Rick Scott vetoed.

The science, technology, engineering, math and medical center in Valparaiso received $250,000 last year to help cover some its costs. This year, Scott deleted the item from the budget.

For the district, that means a 20 percent cut in the school’s annual budget, according to spokesman Henry Kelley.

The STEMM Center houses the Okaloosa STEMM Academy, which just wrapped up its third school year. Since opening, the program has garnered strong interest from students, parents and a number of organizations including the Air Force Armament Museum and Engineers for America.

Projects of interest that will go forward are:

•$62 million to widen U.S. Highway 98 in the Destin and South Walton areas

•$19.5 million increase in student funding between Okaloosa, Santa Rosa and Walton school districts

•$12.4 million to the University of West Florida to fund critical workforce education needs, veterans and military support and economic development and research

•$3 million for Eglin/Niceville Reclaim Water Project

•$300,000 for a homeless shelter in Fort Walton Beach

•$50,000 for Northwest Florida Fairgrounds

•$36,973 for the Northwest Florida Ballet

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: State funding not approved for Okaloosa STEMM Center

Crestview City Council votes against reassigning attorney's contract

CRESTVIEW — City attorney Jerry Miller will continue to represent Crestview's interests — for at least another week. Maybe.

With Miller leaving the Pleat, Perry and Ritchie law firm to go into private practice as of June 30, the City Council voted 2-3 not to reassign the city's contract with PPR to his new practice.

Under its contract, which by its vote the council did not terminate, Pleat, Perry and Ritchie will still provide representation for Crestview. That could include contracting with Miller to continue serving as the city’s attorney, City Clerk Betsy Roy said.

“Now the ball is in Pleat and Perry’s court,” Roy said.

Councilmen Joe Blocker, Mickey Rytman and JB Whitten cast the "nay" votes.

Rytman proposed using the situation as an opportunity to put city attorney services out for bid.

Blocker has in the past been a vocal critic of PPR's monthly bills, calling for more detailed statements and demanding council approval of them, a request Miller said he was agreeable to.

Whitten questioned charges for copies of legal documents. For example, he said, a review of invoices submitted to Roy included one photocopy on Feb. 22 billed at $696.75.

Miller said he does not handle PPR billing and was not aware of the charges. However, as a private practice attorney, he will be doing his own billing and would scrutinize his invoices.

Whitten also reviewed average annual billing under the last three years respectively of Miller and his predecessor, Ben Holley's, tenures.

While Holley's average billing was $29,343 per year, Miller's firm charged an average of $78,615, but Whitten said the increase could be because Miller had to defend the city against several suits.

Councilman Bill Cox defended Miller's record of service, and said if he is terminated, the city might not be able to find a less expensive lawyer.

"Mr. Miller is among the finest of city and municipal attorneys in this state and probably this country," Cox said.

Miller said if the city chooses to put the city attorney contract out for bid, the council "should exercise its right of termination" because no "ethical attorney" would bid while another attorney still holds the position.

Email News Bulletin Staff Writer Brian Hughes, follow him on Twitter or call 850-682-6524.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Crestview City Council votes against reassigning attorney's contract

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