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HUBBUB: Mileage tax would hurt Florida's poor

Editor's Note: Featured comments are the most thoughtful or eloquently stated comments from our Facebook page and crestviewbulletin.com and do not necessarily reflect the newspaper management's views.

TOP COMMENT: MILEAGE TAX WOULD HURT THE POOR

By Jonah Irvington

This tax disproportionately affects the poor, as most of them have older cars with poor gas mileage, so they are already paying more to commute.

Add to that a mileage tax, and the fact that all the cheap housing is at least 30 miles away from the only jobs in the area that they are qualified for.

You think crime is bad now? Just wait until folks can't even afford to work and are now having to resort to less than ethical means to survive.

Oppress the working class

This is ridiculous. Here, install a device into your car that lets the government know where you are at all times — or pay a huge once-a-year, lump-sum inflated tax. Let's oppress and rape the working class.

Mike Dunn

Toll booth, yes; tracking device, no

Just put up a toll booth and be done with it. No one will want a tracking device on their vehicle. Period.

How do we know when they'll stop watching? Are we supposed to take their word for it? I think not!

Carol Zukosky-Clemons

State can't help with roads

In other words, this meeting was to tell Crestview, "We can't help you with your road problem … but hey, we have a great way for you to raise revenue in the mean time." 

Mike Sayers

Retail marijuana could help

The tax made off retail marijuana alone would repair all roads and infrastructure in Florida, and put dealers out of business.

But let's not talk facts. Let's speculate with glasses from yester-century.

Robert Damon Bradley

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This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: HUBBUB: Mileage tax would hurt Florida's poor

EDITOR’S DESK: Board games bring a welcome, personal distraction

Growing up, I loved board games. My brother and I played Monopoly as often as we could — my go-to mover was the brass boot — and I loved the narrative of Clue and the buzzer with Taboo.

But somewhere along the line, that passion for face-to-face strategy phased out. (Looking back, it was probably around the time Thomas' Library — my bedroom book collection, carefully curated from Book Fair finds — also closed without ceremony.)

That would have been in sixth grade, when birthday presents included a Macintosh Performa 6116CD. The system came loaded with games (that was back when a lot of premium software came bundled with the computer).

The Nintendo — which I'd long neglected — had nothing on the computer, which was the only thing that successfully supplanted board games and books as pastimes. (I mean, I was a Pizza Hut Book It! kid.)

But living in the country, seeing children my age — or anyone other than family and my dog, Teddy Bear — much, much less than my classmates, made the computer a popular attraction, especially when my brother got busier with high school.

I must have played parlor games since those childhood days, but just don't recall it.

However, Friday night, while with friends in Niceville, the host pulled out Telestrations, a drawing version of the popular Telephone game. (You know, you whisper something to someone, they whisper it to someone else, and when you reach the end of the line, the resulting, distorted message is humorous.)

After someone drew something, another person had to guess it, and the dry-erase tablet was passed from one person to the next. After everyone finished drawing and guessing, and each player received his or her tablet back, I laughed so hard it hurt when everyone individually paged through the results.

So when I read through reporter Brian Hughes' feature on North Okaloosa's board gamers, I just thought, "I get it."

There's nothing wrong with video games or the internet, which can expose people to different cultures and viewpoints.

But when you spend most of your life in front of a computer, tablet or smart phone screen with work, it's nice to see people face to face.

Just like the good old days.

What's your view? Write a letter to the editor or tweet News Bulletin Editor Thomas Boni.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: EDITOR’S DESK: Board games bring a welcome, personal distraction

HUBBUB: A shout-out to Crestview Publix; a bypass is the only option

Editor's Note: Featured comments are the most thoughtful or eloquently stated comments from our Facebook page and crestviewbulletin.com and do not necessarily reflect the newspaper management's views.

•••

TOP COMMENT:

Publix serves the community

Just wanted to give a shout-out to our Publix and the store manager Tim Bryant.

I read about a family who requested they order a buggy made specifically for special needs children called Caroline's Cart. Well, of course our amazing Publix came through and called the family to be the first to use it when it came in.

It warms my heart that some companies still truly care about their customers and, if it's possible, I love Crestview Publix even more now! The credit for this story goes to Renee Christopher.

Luke M Sheplock‎

•••

Resolution now acknowledges traffic?

It only took the Crestview Chamber how many years to figure this out? The public has been saying this since the early 1990s!

Michael Smith 

•••

'Abysmal' traffic chokes area's life

Here's a little tip: the northbound traffic is just going to get a lot worse when the current flyover construction is completed at the intersection of FL 85 and FL 123 next year!

The abysmal traffic — seven days a week, not just Monday through Friday — just chokes the life out of the communities in North Okaloosa. 

Al Aplin

•••

This will never change

When you live in the largest city in the county and less than 2,000 people cast a ballot that could change the way the city is run, this will never change.

Allie Lyman-Fries

•••

Bypass is the only option

Bottom line: There's no way to widen Highway 85 coming through town. Businesses sit too close to the road, and more are added all the time.

There seems to be no forethought in regards to easement for future widening of the road.

The only viable, logical and practical option is a bypass.

Angel Gonzalez

•••

Limit trips to Crestview

The new businesses are built too close to the road and are impossible to safely enter and exit.

I limit my trips to Crestview to once or twice a month, and I live in Holt — that's how much I despise the traffic and value my life and safety of my family!

Kim Farris

•••

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This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: HUBBUB: A shout-out to Crestview Publix; a bypass is the only option

HUBBUB: Cadle didn't win; No chance with trisomy

Editor's Note: Featured comments are the most thoughtful or eloquently stated comments from our Facebook page and crestviewbulletin.com and do not necessarily reflect the newspaper management's views.

•••

Election sends message

The message seemed to me to be 86.7 percent of voters don't give a damn.

Don Holloway

•••

Cadle didn't win

If the challengers to Mayor David Cadle had really wanted change for Crestview, they would have gotten together and selected one challenger to face him.

Obviously, it was the egos that ruled. Because, if you look at the total votes against (Cadle), he didn't win.

Brenda Wright Bush

•••

No chance with trisomy

Trisomy 13 and 18 are lethal. (Babies diagnosed with it) do not have a chance, and I would be more alarmed at a doctor giving false hope.

I understand the parents' view but … why prolong this little being's suffering? There's no way anyone could have prevented the nondisjunction that occurred.

Lisa Brown

•••

Re-thinking trisomy 13

After an amniocentesis, I was told my son (has) trisomy 13 … I went through ultrasounds every two weeks to monitor his growth.

He was born healthy and happy! He is now soon to be 16 and doing awesome!

Vicki Parker Fortier

•••

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This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: HUBBUB: Cadle didn't win; No chance with trisomy

EDITOR’S DESK: Candidates sling mud — we report news

Today, Crestview and Laurel Hill residents are heading to the polls and determining their cities' future leaders.

I have no clue who's going to win, but I am confident of one thing: reporter Brian Hughes will be on the ball, tweeting returns throughout the evening at the Supervisor of Elections office. You can see follow him on Twitter or follow the #NWFvotes hashtag for comprehensive Northwest Florida election coverage, backed by the dedicated team at the Northwest Florida Daily News. 

You know, since September, Brian has relentlessly covered Crestview's and Laurel Hill's races. As soon as candidates prequalified with the Supervisor of Elections, he interviewed them. His proactive coverage included asking Crestview mayoral and Laurel Hill city council candidates about the issues our readers cared about most. (We asked readers beforehand.) And he attended all known candidate forums, namely those presented by resident Mae Reatha Coleman and the North Okaloosa Republican Club.

He was on the ball in more ways than one, I'm proud to say — namely, with reporting the election fairly.

A MAYOR'S JOB

Crestview's election grew heated. In fact, I've never seen anything like it at the local level. At times, I believed that was due to assistance from another media outlet using Facebook to do a campaign strategist's job.

Meanwhile, the News Bulletin didn't delve into issues that, though interesting for gossips, really don't affect someone's fitness for office. 

Don't believe me?

Crestview's chief executive officer ensures that the city's charter and laws are enforced, and has limited authority to veto a city ordinance, according to Article III, Section 10 of the city charter.

Further, he or she can investigate any city employee or city records. (Oddly, the charter says "he" and not "he or she," so that's my nod to International Women's Day, which was celebrated on Sunday.)

And the mayor reports any city employee's misconduct or neglect of duty to the council; and generally promotes the city's "peace, good order, safety and good morals," the charter states.

Finally, the mayor "shall put down riots and unlawful assemblies, and may use the police and common power of the city for such purposes," the charter states.

That's it.

The mayor is not a dictator, there are the usual checks and balances, and the man, or woman, in the office does not judge in larger child welfare issues, namely, whether grandparents can or cannot see their grandchildren.

So I'm not sure why some of these issues were so big on the campaign trail. And why good-intentioned grandparents and other residents were used to promote this agenda. 

REPORTING FAIRLY

The media's primary goal of fairness doesn't take a vacation just because it's an election year.

And because candidates' claws come out during these times, those in the media must know how to separate the wheat from the chaff.

In other words, what's a legitimate concern about someone's fitness for office and what's a subjective value judgment.

I started working in local media in 2005, and never strayed from tough questions or the responsibility of holding public officials accountable. Unlike New York Magazine's description of disgraced NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams, per anonymous coworkers' remarks, I do not avoid "divisive news." (Saying otherwise should have been reason enough for Lester Holt to unseat Williams years ago.)

But I've always said you have to use the right tool for the job.

During the campaign season, most of the claims that crossed my desk were items tailor made for opponents' campaign strategists and campaign advertising. 

I asked tipsters if they had a smoking gun — something that proved misuse of public funds, illegal activity or other corruption.

They didn't. So it wasn't a story.

Then, I encouraged them to write a letter to the editor about the candidate, because that — not a news report — is the right tool for the job.

The CNB would need someone breaking a law or discriminating against someone or doing something else objectively unfitting for a mayoral candidate. 

Otherwise, it's just a subjective value judgment.

Let candidates sling mud at each other, if they choose; that's what campaign advertising is for.

We at the CNB will just ask fair questions and report the news.

What's your view? Write a letter to the editor or tweet News Bulletin Editor Thomas Boni.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: EDITOR’S DESK: Candidates sling mud — we report news

EDITOR'S DESK: A plea for in-depth obituaries

The News Bulletin publishes obituaries, not just to inform readers about funeral and reception times, but also as the last chance for someone's name to appear in print.

So I always hope families will really make that space count. The cost is $45 for a 500-word goodbye, so why not offer sentimental notes? Why not truly tell that person's story?

This week, we say goodbye to Deana Marie Barton, whose family did just that.

I saw the line, "As a child, Deana had a fascination with bathrooms, and never failed to explore as many as possible during trips across the country…" and just learned so much more about this amazing woman than I have from many of the death notices we receive.

Ditto for Gary Snyder, who "loved traveling, cribbage, outdoors activities and was an avid 'Star Trek' fan."

(Note: I'm personally grieving for his wife, Nancy, whom I know through my involvement as Relay For Life Crestview's publicity chairperson. You may remember we profiled the couple in the News Bulletin last year as part of our Relay For Life series.)

When you write an obituary, all I ask is this one favor: Tell your loved one's life story. That means write about the essentials (like their dates of birth and death, jobs held, survivors, etc.), but also tell the community what made them tick. (And even, what ticked them off! Sometimes, that's fun to read!)

Let them be remembered for whom they loved, and how deeply they loved those people.

Often, we'll get an obituary and I'll ask Renee, our editorial assistant, to request, one more time, a head shot from the funeral home, and more details from the family.

I'm sure that gets old.

But we take this stuff very seriously. And I believe telling a person's full life story is the only way to treat that life with dignity in an obituary.

What's your view? Write a letter to the editor or tweet News Bulletin Editor Thomas Boni.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: EDITOR'S DESK: A plea for in-depth obituaries

Crestview councilmen's 'automatic in' may be due to qualifications

Brian Hughes' report on Countryview Park's upgrades, which include additional picnic tables, safety padding around the posts supporting basketball goals and a vandalism-resistant drinking fountain, got me thinking. 

While reading the story, I thought of how Bill Cox — who earned his Crestview City Council seat unchallenged — was so vocal last year in his concerns for the park, and how that might have affected the campaign trail.

It's easy to see apathy as a source of Cox's and JB Whitten's automatic in to the City Council. (You'll recall that they didn't need to campaign or go through debates like our mayoral candidates. No one wanted to run against them.)

But what if residents saw Cox's efforts, and Whitten's, and realized these were civic-minded men actively engaged in their community, and they really were the best men for the job, so why run against them? (Remember, Whitten, a retired teacher and former Air Force non-commissioned officer, managed Seniors vs. Crime's Crestview office and served as the North Okaloosa Republican Club's former president, and Cox — who ran unsuccessfully for the City Council in 2013 — sat on the Crestview Board of Adjustment.)

When I see what positive change Cox already spurred as a private citizen, it makes me see the glass half-full. 

What's your view? Write a letter to the editor or tweet News Bulletin Editor Thomas Boni.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Crestview councilmen's 'automatic in' may be due to qualifications

HUBBUB: Should have had impartial investigation; What happened to customer relations?

Editor's Note: Featured comments are the most thoughtful or eloquently stated comments from our Facebook page and crestviewbulletin.com and do not necessarily reflect the newspaper management's views.

•••

Should have had impartial investigation

Police departments rarely find wrongdoing when they investigate themselves. These types of accusations should be investigated by an independent, unbiased board.

Bill Skinner Garrett

•••

'Assaulted' by police — really?

Assaulted by tapping on (a) shoulder? Obviously looking for everything and anything to try and make an issue of.

papabanjo55 (Yahoo)

•••

Forget proposal to terminate contract

You won't get better municipal legal representation than Jerry Miller at any cost. He has at least 30 years' experience and, at one time or another, has worked for nearly all cities in Okaloosa County. Don't be penny wise and dollar foolish.

Chuck Ingram

•••

KKK fliers should be considered hate crime

It's disgusting that these people have the nerve to pass out fliers … it's a tactic to brainwash people, especially kids.

Fliers are not harmless … It's ridiculous and should be considered a hate crime.

Candice Johns

•••

Distribution of fliers 'very upsetting'

As an interracial family, I found this to be very upsetting. I don't want my kids growing up around this.

Elizabeth Andrews

•••

Tougher sentences work

Just a tip: Tougher sentences for violent and sexual crimes will result in less of both!

Scott Howard

•••

Mayor must have integrity

What matters to me is integrity. If there is truly a man of good character and integrity in the office, only then can I trust him to lead our community.

Aimee Hodgson Gudinas

•••

Downtown parking a city problem?

Is it me or wouldn't it be right for the downtown business owners to finance the needed parking if they will be the beneficiaries?

Bea Burkett

•••

Combest's example shows possibilities

I have always been proud to say I played on her teams and she was/still is an awesome coach and such a role model for all kids.

And she truly is a great mentor for some of us older ladies now, and shows us (that) with drive and determination you can achieve anything.

Nichole Ranson Overly

•••

Tell more stories like the Campbells'

What a great story about Anne and Woot Campbell. I remember fondly both of them teaching us in school at CHS and Mrs. Arlesia as well. They were very kind to us kids, and we enjoyed growing up with their children in Crestview.

These are the (kinds) of stories we need to hear more about in the news outlets: the ones that bring back memories of those special people who gave their lives for the sake of young people and their dreams to be productive adults one day.

Graham W. Fountain

•••

What happened to customer relations?

I am a Milligan resident and was shocked to receive my higher water bills, especially with no notice mailed out to every customer. What happened to "customer relations"?

Julia Quintrell Phillips

•••

Join the conversation on our Facebook page>>

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: HUBBUB: Should have had impartial investigation; What happened to customer relations?

HUBBUB: Tougher sentences, please; Combest sets example

Editor's Note: Featured comments are the most thoughtful or eloquently stated comments from our Facebook page and crestviewbulletin.com and do not necessarily reflect the newspaper management's views.

Tougher sentences work

Just a tip: Tougher sentences for violent and sexual crimes will result in less of both!

Scott Howard

Mayor must have integrity

What matters to me is integrity. If there is truly a man of good character and integrity in the office, only then can I trust him to lead our community.

Aimee Hodgson Gudinas

Downtown parking a city problem?

Is it me or wouldn't it be right for the downtown business owners to finance the needed parking if they will be the beneficiaries?

Bea Burkett

Combest's example shows possibilities

I have always been proud to say I played on her teams and she was/still is an awesome coach and such a role model for all kids.

And she truly is a great mentor for some of us older ladies now, and shows us (that) with drive and determination you can achieve anything.

Nichole Ranson Overly

Tell more stories like the Campbells'

What a great story about Anne and Woot Campbell. I remember fondly both of them teaching us in school at CHS and Mrs. Arlesia as well. They were very kind to us kids, and we enjoyed growing up with their children in Crestview.

These are the (kinds) of stories we need to hear more about in the news outlets: the ones that bring back memories of those special people who gave their lives for the sake of young people and their dreams to be productive adults one day.

Graham W. Fountain

What happened to customer relations?

I am a Milligan resident and was shocked to receive my higher water bills, especially with no notice mailed out to every customer. What happened to "customer relations"?

Julia Quintrell Phillips

Join the conversation on our Facebook page>>

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: HUBBUB: Tougher sentences, please; Combest sets example

EDITOR'S DESK: I challenge you to read the campaign coverage, vote

We are entering the campaign season's home stretch. Remember: North Okaloosa County's municipal elections are March 10.

I've always found politics fascinating, and would love to be a talking head on TV or the web, exploring each Crestview and Laurel Hill candidate's campaign strategy, optics, opportunities and blunders. (I didn't major in political science, but watch enough Fox News and MSNBC to handle the job like a pro!)

Still, some of the excitement wanes when you look at potential voting (projected at 10 to 15 percent for Crestview residents.)

But if this election attracts so few voters, it's not for lack of knowledge.

The Crestview News Bulletin has published candidate profiles since September 2014. Shortly after the news side knew someone threw his or her hat in the ring, our readers knew.

In addition, reporter Brian Hughes covered two Crestview mayoral candidate forums, and he'll be there for the North Okaloosa Republican Club's Laurel Hill candidate forum, too. (That's 6 p.m. Monday at Laurel Hill Baptist Church's Fellowship Hall.)

Check out Crestview and Laurel Hill candidates' answers to readers' top questions, and look at our Election Guide for plenty of campaign reports and video.

Then there's the League of Women Voters of Okaloosa County's E-Voter, which breaks down each Crestview and Laurel Hill candidate's platform and qualifications. 

Additionally, read and watch all local media, in addition to the News Bulletin, so you can have a truly informed opinion. 

So, no excuses! I've laid it all out for you.

Will you accept the challenge, be informed and vote March 10?

What's your view? Write a letter to the editor or tweet News Bulletin Editor Thomas Boni.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: EDITOR'S DESK: I challenge you to read the campaign coverage, vote

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